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Winter Paralympics officially open, Russian athletes greeted with boos

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The Milan-Cortina Winter Paralympics officially opened Friday, with some countries boycotting the opening ceremony because of the return of the Russian flag to the global sports stage.

The Russian flag made its return during the nations’ parade, marking the first time it was flown at the Paralympics since the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, and signalling a possible full-fledged return to the Olympic circles ahead of the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles.

Some boos were heard as the Russian athletes entered the stage during the parade. Four members of the delegation represented the country wearing a bright-red uniform. They waved to the crowd as they paraded at the ancient Arena di Verona that was retrofitted with new wheelchair ramps and accessible restrooms along with other safety upgrades.

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FRANCE IN FOCUS © Yola Watrucka, Getty Images/iStockphoto

The opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics last month also saw its share of tension, with US Vice President JD Vance as well as the Israeli team both being met by loud jeers from the crowd.

Russia‘s national anthem could be played for gold medalists for the first time on the stage of a major global sporting event since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Russian athletes were initially banned because of a state-sponsored doping programme, and the sanctions had continued after the invasion.

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There was applause when Ukraine was announced, but none of its athletes were seen as the country went through with its boycott of the ceremony. Six other nations had planned to not attend for political reasons, according to the International Paralympic Committee, including the Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Poland and Lithuania.

Also back was the flag of Russia’s close ally Belarus, which had two athletes participating in the parade.

Iran’s flag was absent because the only athlete set to compete for the nation, Para cross-country skier Aboulfazl Khatibi, had to withdraw just hours before the opening ceremony after he could not make it to Italy safely amid the intensifying Middle East conflict.

Only about 45 athletes – of the more than 600 competing – represented their nations at the ceremony. Because the Games are one of the most widespread ever, with competitions and venues in different clusters around Italy, many athletes were not able to attend. 

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Each nation announced their flag-bearers, but volunteers were handed the task of actually carrying the flags for all nations because not all flag-bearers could attend the ceremony for logistics and training issues. Many would start competing early on Saturday morning. 

During the parade, videos were shown with the other athletes at their competition locations.

Among the performances during the ceremony at the Arena di Verona – the first UNESCO World Heritage site to host a Paralympic ceremony – was Stewart Copeland, the renowned drummer of The Police, and DJ Miky Bionic, known as the first DJ in the world to play with a bionic arm. 

The Milan-Cortina Games mark the 50th anniversary of the Winter Paralympics. Athletes will compete across 79 events in six sports. It is the biggest Winter Paralympics ever, with a record female participation, according to the IPC. The curling events began on Wednesday.

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(FRANCE 24 with AP and AFP)

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