Russian junior weightlifters cleared to compete under national flag – official

23 Jan, 2026 15:55 / Updated 38 minutes ago
Athletes aged 20-23 will be allowed to take part in international events with their anthem and colors, Sports Minister Mikhail Degtyarev has said

Russian junior weightlifters will be allowed to compete at international events under their national flag and anthem, Russia’s Sports Minister and Olympic Committee chief Mikhail Degtyarev has said.

The athletes were fully barred from international tournaments in 2022 following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict. In May 2023, the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) executive board allowed them to return only under a neutral flag. The federation had decided to ease all restrictions for junior athletes, Degtyarev said on Friday.

“Literally yesterday late in the evening, information came through … that the [international] weightlifting federation has agreed to admit all [athletes] aged 20–23 with the flag and anthem,” Degtyarev stated at the ‘Znanie. Gosudarstvo’ (‘Knowledge. State’) forum.

The IWF Executive Board later issued a statement saying that athletes from Russia and Belarus will be allowed to compete at its youth and junior events “without previous vetting and with the capacity of fully displaying their respective national symbols.”

The minister said that the decision follows a recommendation issued in December 2025 by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which advised global sports bodies not to restrict access for Russian and Belarusian junior athletes to youth competitions, either in individual or team disciplines. The IOC at the same time urged federations to maintain existing limits on the participation of Russian and Belarusian adults.

Russian adult weightlifters will therefore continue to be allowed to compete only with neutral status and without national symbols, Degtyarev noted. He said their full return is expected once the Russian Olympic Committee’s rights are restored within the Olympic movement, something he suggested could happen in March.

For more than a decade, the IOC has imposed increasingly stringent requirements on Russian athletes, including bans on the national anthem and flag at previous Games over alleged doping violations. Restrictions were tightened after February 2022, prompting Moscow to accuse Western countries of politicizing sport and pressuring federations to exclude Russian competitors for political reasons. Russian officials have branded the IOC measures a distortion of the Olympic Charter, which is supposed to keep the Games free of political interference.