Despite IOC Restrictions Team USA Athletes Are Protesting at the Tokyo Olympics
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is investigating an act of protest undertaken by a Team USA athlete during a medal ceremony at the Tokyo Games on Saturdayâ"and more demonstrations possible in the coming days.
Raven Saunders, 25, a U.S. shot-putter who won silver in Tokyo, raised her hands and crossed them in an X while posing for a photo on the medal podium. Moments later, U.S. fencer Race Imboden won bronze in the foil event (which took place in a separate venue). While accepting his medal, Imboden appeared to flash a circled X on his hand.
Saunders told the New York Times that a handful of Team USA athletes formed a plan over the past few weeks to use the X symbol as their way of protesting. Saunders named Imbodenâ"who has not commented publicly on his protestâ"as one of those athletes but did not identify any others. U.S. hammer thrower Gwen Berry has indicated that she will protest in Tokyo. âProtest on a podium ⦠it is a human right,â Berry said in a TIME100 Talks interview. âIt is not for the IOC to decide.â
What does the âXâ represent?Saunders explained that the X was meant to represent âthe intersection of where all people who are oppressed meet.â She made the gesture after Chinaâs anthemâ"honoring the gold medal-winner Gong Lijiao in the shot-put eventâ"had finished playing, adding that she did not want to be disrespectful to a national anthem.
Saundersâ"who is Black and openly gayâ"said that her win was for more than just herself: âFor me, just being who I always aspired to be, to be able to be me and not apologize for it [and] show the younger generation that no matter what they tell you, no matter how many boxes they try to fit you in, you can be you,â Saunders said after her event.
What are the IOC and USOPC rules on protest?Until very recently, Rule 50 of the IOCâs Olympic Charter barred athletes from participating in â[any] kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda.â While just last year the IOC re-affirmed that it would not allow athlete protests in a bid for political neutrality, on July 2, in the run-up to the Tokyo Games, the IOC announced changes to Rule 50 that allowed some forms of demonstrations, an attempt to respond to the reality of athlete protests.
Under the new rule, athletes are now able to engage in a non-disruptive demonstration to âexpress their viewsâ while on the field of play before their events begin, though athletes arenât allowed to protest during competition or while on the podium. (Members of Team USAâs womenâs soccer team, as well as members of other countriesâ teams, took a knee before matches in the soccer tournament played out.)
If an athlete flouts the rule, potential violations are evaluated by the athleteâs national Olympic committee, the international federation for the sport involved, and the IOC. The United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) announced on Dec. 10, 2020, however, that it will not respond to such behavior at this yearâs Gamesâ"as long as an athleteâs actions are not deemed hateful.
The IOC is facing pressure to do the same. On the day of the Olympic opening ceremony, more than 150 athletes, academics and social justice advocates signed an open letter demanding changes to Rule 50 and urging the IOC to ârefrain from imposing sanctions on athletes protesting and demonstrating.â
In Tokyo, as required under the rule, the USOPC evaluated Saundersâ action and came to their own determination. In a statement sent to Reuters, the USOPC said they had conducted their own review and ruled Saunders did not break any rules, saying âRaven Saundersâ peaceful expression in support of racial and social justice⦠was respectful of her competitors and did not violate our rules related to demonstration.â
What is the history of protests at the Olympics?While the IOC advocates for political neutrality, the Olympics have been a stage for political protests nearly since they began in 1894. One of the earliest examples came in 1906, from Irish track and field athlete Peter OâConnor. A decade before the Irish War of Independence, OâConnor was angered by having to run under the British flag, so he scaled a 20-foot flag pole and waved the Irish flag.
Most famously, in 1968, American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos famously raised their fists in a Black Power salute when the American national anthem played at the 1968 Mexico City Games. The photo of their gloved fists in the air has become an iconic image of protest. It was a bold act that ultimately cost the athletes their careers, although they did not regret their actions. âIâm proud of what we did,â Carlos told the New York Times in 2016.
It wasnât until 1975 that the Olympic charter banned protests. At that time, it was actually part of Rule 55 in the charter and it stated: âEvery kind of demonstration or propaganda, whether political, religious or racial, in the Olympic areas is forbidden.â
Just a few weeks after the IOC tweaked its rules to allow for some forms of protest. It is facing its first test with Saunders. In a press conference, IOC spokesman Mark Adams said they are âlooking into the matterâ and considering their next steps.â For her part, Saunders is taking it in good humor, tweeting, âLet them try and take this medal. Iâm running across the border even though I canât swim.â She included the cry-laughing emoji and pinned it to the top of her feed.
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