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The International Olympic Committee has maintained its 2023 suspension of Russia and Belarus for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, barring them from competing as national delegations while permitting a limited group of Individual Neutral Athletes (AINs) to take part.
For Milan-Cortina, which opens Feb. 6, the IOC has issued invitations to 13 Russian and seven Belarusian competitors across individual disciplines; team sports, including Russia’s prominent ice hockey program, remain banned.
AINs will compete without flags, national anthems or national identification and must meet strict vetting criteria — including no public support for the invasion of Ukraine or ties to military or security agencies — and qualify through each sport’s normal channels.
The vetting process is under scrutiny after media reporting and intelligence material suggested pro-war links for several cleared Russians, and footage of an IOC review-panel member embracing a sanctioned Russian gymnast has raised further questions.
The IOC says invitations followed established review procedures; Ukraine’s Olympic Committee and other critics are calling for tighter checks.



















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