Russia

No flag, no anthem, no shame: The war on Russian sport just found its ugliest stage yet

RT English · 2026-06-26

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: The Romanian city of Cluj-Napoca banned the Russian flag and anthem from the World Challenge Cup, contradicting a recent ruling by World Gymnastics that allowed their return. This led to the Russian gymnastics team withdrawing from the competition in protest. • Why it matters: The ban reflects ongoing tensions in international sports, influenced by geopolitical conflicts, particularly the situation in Ukraine, and raises concerns about fairness and the integrity of sporting events. • What to watch next: Observers will be monitoring the reactions from other national federations and the potential implications for future competitions involving Russian and Belarusian athletes, as well as any further actions from World Gymnastics.

By Alan Moore, a Vilnius-based sports journalist and host of Capital Sports 3.0. A former athlete, he has over 30 years of professional sports and higher education experience across the globe.

By Alan Moore, a Vilnius-based sports journalist and host of Capital Sports 3.0. A former athlete, he has over 30 years of professional sports and higher education experience across the globe.

As a former international athlete, seeing your flag raised or hearing your anthem play is a nice bonus. Ultimately you compete for yourself, and win or lose you do it for yourself too. Yes, family, club, coach, friends, pets, nation etc., are important, but so long as you’re treated the same as those you’re up against, you can go and give it your best shot. However, after interviewing Russians since 2019 who saw their flag and anthem banned, I asked myself – what if when I had competed, the Irish flag and anthem was banned?

It’s Groundhog Day and the sports world is marching to the beat of the anti-sport drum yet again. Despite ruling that Russian and Belarusian athletes be treated as equals, a Romanian city hosting a sports event for females decided the best way to empower young women was to humiliate them.

Acting against the spirit of sport and committing a major rule violation, the Romanian city of Cluj-Napoca told the Russian Gymnastics Federation (RGF) that their national flag and anthem would not be allowed at the World Challenge Cup this weekend. The move, made verbally so as to circumvent sanction, according to one Russian official, goes against a ruling last month by the global governing body World Gymnastics (WG).

In an effort to use sports to increase dialogue and normalize international contact, WG are one of 12 Olympic governing bodies who ruled Russia’s and Belarus’ flags and anthems can return to the arena. The move on Friday by the Romanians was greeted by shock and anger within the Russian rhythmic gymnastics community – a move that pushed Russia to take a stand.

The Russian team refused to take part due to a “gross violation of the competition regulations by the organizers of the competition,” according to federation press attaché Linar Ginatullin. The decision was “appreciated” by WG, according to reports.

Ginatullin confirmed, in a media release on Friday, that the event organizers “verbally notified” Moscow that Russia’s flag and anthem would not be seen in the arena if any Russians were to win.

An RGF official from a regional committee told of the “betrayal” felt by the Russian rhythmic gymnastics community. “These girls train so hard to represent their country and then are told, right as they are going to compete, the rules don’t apply to you, you’re not worthy of this,” she said, pointing out that the way the information was given showed “extreme cowardice” and designed to “cover” the organizers from WG sanction.

“They make it look [like] capricious Russians don’t take part,” she asserted.

It wasn’t only Russia that was feeling confused and annoyed. A number of national federation officials were disappointed that Russia pulled out, but equally disappointed by the organizers. And they pointed out that Kiev has pushed western nations into acting against the interests of the sport and sportswomen.

A Spanish official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said “It is no longer about sports. The Russians, Belarusians too, are strong and in this [Challenge Cup] series are winning a lot. The Ukrainians have lobbied many [other nation’s] officials to refuse even these girls to compete.”

Following WG’s ruling in May, Russian and Belarusian athletes competed under their own flags and anthems in the World Challenge Cup series second round (of three) in Beijing. With just the Romanian stop of the series left, Russia had four golds, and three silvers and bronzes. Belarus nabbed a silver and bronze. 15-year-old Russian starlet, Sofia Ilteriakova, in her debut senior season, was tipped to keep ahead of Chinese rival Wang Qi and add to her two golds, two silvers, and bronze won in Challenge Cup events in 2026.

Ufa-born Ilteriakova, who has become a darling of gymnastics fans, was the subject of unwarranted abuse and attacks by Ukrainian officials and online trolls when she was overcome with winning silver in her first major international event, the first World Cup series event in Sofia, Bulgaria, and faced the wrong way as the Ukrainian anthem was played.

Watching the video of the child looking more than a little lost as the Ukrainian anthem is played, anyone with a brain can see that she was poorly advised or directed by officials on what to do.

Ukraine’s gymnastics federation demanded that the youngster be stripped of her medal and banned for disrespecting the “state symbol” of Ukraine. WG, in giving her a warning to be careful in future, pointed out that they themselves needed to “clarify the protocol” of awards ceremonies.

This moment, according to the Spanish official, has been used as a stick to beat Russia’s back, but it has repercussions for the young girls in competition.

“It’s disappointing for our girls,” the Spanish official noted, “they want to compete [against] the best. They [the gymnasts] are all young girls, highly competitive, but young girls. They said ‘It could be our flag next’.”

Ukraine, with the support of some EU nations, has used every means to ‘other’ Russia, Russians, and even those of Russian-origin. The stink raised by Ukrainian media and some western outlets when Russia-born German gymnast Darja Varfolomeev dared to post pictures on her Instagram of her competing in Crimea in 2021, when she was just 14, forcing her to delete the ‘offending’ material, was instructive. Nobody cared when she was just another competitor, but when she won Olympic individual all-around gold and Ukraine’s medal hope Taisiia Onofriichuk severely under-performed to finish 9th, Darja was subjected to an onslaught of hate.

Politics should have no place in sports, but they have. Using politics, social media, and threats to defeat opponents, rather than in the arena, is not sport. It’s what sports are meant to get rid of. Sadly, too many European nations seem hell-bent on preventing a normalization of communication between people, while claiming that Israel, the US, and other favored nations must be allowed to compete to… normalize communication between people.

The final round of the rhythmic gymnastics World Cup is scheduled for Milan next month. On Friday, WG officials would not be drawn as to whether the Italian organizers would ensure Russian athletes would be treated like their fellow competitors, or what sanctions the organizers in Romania would face for their violation of WG rules.

Chances are, those who took the decision to break the rules are sitting in Brussels, and have confirmed that funding for the event will be released and nobody will face proscription for not allowing young Russian girls take part in a sports event.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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Source: RT English
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