Luxury, boutique and other high-end hotels saw the biggest bumps in occupancy during the Olympics, according to data released Tuesday by Paris je t’aime, the city’s tourism office.
08.08.2024 - 02:13 / euronews.com
Rarely on the podium and banned from the Olympic opening ceremony, fifteen Russian athletes competing at this year’s Games have an uneasy status as “Individual Neutral Athletes” following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Some in the Olympic Village opposed them taking part, and Russian opinion is divided.
In Russia, the Olympics aren’t being shown on TV and some politicians and media figures have even described those competing in Paris as traitors.
“We're here to fight for ourselves,” said 20-year-old tennis player Diana Shnaider, adding that it was “amazing” to be at her first Olympics.
She and Mirra Andreeva became the first Russians to win a medal at the Paris Olympics, taking silver in women’s doubles Sunday.
Shnaider and Andreeva’s silver in the tennis on Sunday was the first for Russian athletes. They stood on the podium in matching green-and-white tracksuits as a green flag with the inscription AIN — the French acronym for Individual Neutral Athlete — was raised.
The Ukrainian government and Olympic committee wanted Russian athletes excluded from all international sports and opposed IOC efforts to include them as neutral athletes.
Ukraine briefly boycott Olympic qualifying competitions that allowed Russians to attend but changed their policy facing the risk of not being represented at the Olympics at all.
Activists gathered information from Russian athletes’ social media in the period leading up to the Olympics, flagging posts they considered showed support for the wall.
When asked about her likes under two of these flagged posts after losing in Sunday’s final, Shnaider responded: “I’m not going to answer anything about politics here."
Ukrainian gold-medallist high jumper Yaroslava Mahuchich spoke out about neutral athletes the next day, asking “how can a terrorist be allowed to compete in a competition about peace?”
"The Olympic Games are about peace,” she said. “But Russia didn’t stop, and during these Games, there were massive attacks on Ukrainian cities.”
Of the 32 “neutral" athletes in Paris, 17 previously represented Belarus and only 15 represented Russia.
At the last Summer Olympics in Tokyo, there were more than 300 Russians.
In gymnastics and weightlifting, Russian teams skipped qualifying rounds in protest of being forced to compete as neutrals or undergo vetting, including social media checks.
Some athletes even qualified, accepted their Olympic invitations and withdrew weeks before the Games began. The IOC lists 10 Russians and one Belarusian who “initially accepted but subsequently declined.”
It wasn’t clear whether they made the decision to withdraw under pressure at home.
At least 82 athletes competing at this year’s Olympics were born in Russia, including the neutral
Luxury, boutique and other high-end hotels saw the biggest bumps in occupancy during the Olympics, according to data released Tuesday by Paris je t’aime, the city’s tourism office.
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