University sports body reinstates Belarusian athletes, eases restrictions on Russians


May 26 (Reuters) - The International University ⁠Sports Federation (FISU) said on Tuesday it was fully reinstating athletes from Belarus ⁠and easing restrictions on Russian competitors kept out of events due to ‌Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

The Federation, in a statement on its website, said it was acting in line with policy adopted by the International Olympic Committee and international federations governing individual sports. Several sports federations ​have adopted similar stands.

"The International University Sports Federation Executive ⁠Committee has decided today to ⁠reinstate student-athletes with a Belarusian passport at all its events with immediate effect, in line ⁠with ‌the IOC’s 7 May 2026 recommendations," it said.

It described the position of Russian competitors as "more complex" -- as the IOC had not lifted restrictions on ⁠senior athletes -- and introduced "a uniform eligibility framework".

That meant that the ​neutral status imposed by ‌some federations on athletes would be "the maximum restriction applicable at any FISU event". ⁠In those sports ​where federations had reinstated Russian athletes, it would do the same.

"Russian student-athletes may therefore, depending on the sport and the applicable IF position, be eligible to participate at FISU events ⁠under full national conditions," the FISU said.

Mikhail Degtyarev, Russian ​sports minister and head of the national committee, congratulated Belarusian athletes and wrote on Telegram: "FISU is continuing consistently to ease conditions for students from Russia. We welcome this."

The IOC ⁠had recommended that Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials be banned from events since the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Belarus was used as a staging ground for the invasion.

A small number of vetted athletes were permitted to take part in the Cortina ​Winter Games as neutrals, but the International Paralympic Committee ⁠lifted all restrictions for its events.

In recent weeks, international federations for aquatics, gymnastics, wrestling and ​modern pentathlon have eased restrictions on athletes from one ‌or both of the countries.

The FISU organises ​the World University Games - sometimes called the Universiade -- every two years in which thousands of young athletes compete.

(Reporting by Ron Popeski, editing by Deepa Babington)

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