Google – AFP, 28 October 2013
Moscow —
President Vladimir Putin pledged Monday that gay and lesbian athletes and
visitors at next year's Winter Olympic Games in Sochi will feel at ease despite
Russia's new "homosexual propaganda" ban.
"We
will do everything to make sure that athletes, fans and guests feel comfortable
at the Olympic Games regardless of their ethnicity, race or sexual
orientation," Putin told visiting International Olympic Committee (IOC)
President Thomas Bach in remarks broadcast on Russian television.
Russia's
adoption in June of a disputed law prohibiting the dissemination of information
about homosexuality to minors has sparked protests from international rights
groups and calls for a boycott of the country's first post-Soviet Games.
The scandal
has already cast a pall over an event closely associated with the powerful
Russian leader's image and dubbed by some media as the "Putin Games".
Sochi was
meant to showcase the strides Russia has made since the 1980 Summer Games in
Moscow were boycotted by a host of Western nations because of the Soviet
Union's invasion of Afghanistan.
Russian
businesses and the government have already spent a record $50 billion on
preparations aimed at turning Sochi -- a leafy summer resort on the Black Sea
-- into a global magnet for winter activities.
Putin
declared on Monday that "the objective associated with building Olympic
facilities has been met."
The IOC has
in previous months tried to steer clear of the political controversy by noting
that Russia's new legislation did not contravene the Olympic Charter.
Russian
media quoted Bach as complimenting Putin for overseeing preparations for the
February 7-23 festivities but did not quote him as saying anything about the
gay propaganda ban.
"The
IOC is very satisfied with how preparations for the Games are going," news
reports quoted Bach as saying.
"I
hope that very soon, I will once again have the chance to meet (Putin) in Sochi
and to personally award gold medals to your athletes."
Russia's
winter Olympians -- once a national treasure who made the Soviet Union into a
Winter Games superpower -- have been under intense scrutiny because of the
team's underwhelming performances in preceding events.
The country
placed a dire 11th in the medals table at the 2010 event in Vancouver after
wining only three gold medals.
Russia's
various winter sports federations have since used lavish state funding to
attract nearly 100 of the best international coaches to inspire the demoralised
squad.
A part of
Russia's problem has been the IOC's adoption of new events such as snowboarding
that attract young new audiences but in which the country's own athletes have
no tradition.
Russia has
tried to clear that obstacle by awarding citizenships to star athletes from
countries like South Korea that dominate events such as short-track speed
skating.
Putin piled
still more pressure on Russia's team Monday by noting that the government had
spared no expense on its Olympic preparations.
"Obviously,
an honourable and successful result by our athletes is no less important that
the impeccable staging and preparations for the competition itself," the
Russian leader said.
Sports
Minister Vitaly Mutko told Putin that Russia still lagged behind other nations
in some of the newer skiing events.
But he also
promised that the squad "will give fans a reason to be proud."
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