52 Olympians urge Russia to repeal gay laws
Current and former Olympians criticise Games officials and sponsors for lack of action over anti-gay measures

Current and former Olympians criticise Games officials and sponsors for lack of action over anti-gay measures On the eve of the Sochi Winter Games, more than 50 current and former Olympians have called on the Russian authorities to repeal recently introduced anti-gay laws and criticised the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and multinational sponsors for not doing more to force them to do so.
Fifty-two Olympians, with dozens of medals between them and including 12 competitors in Sochi, have launched a trenchant criticism of the lack of action to force Vladimir Putin’s administration to scale back laws that forbid “gay propaganda” aimed at under-18s and have led to a wave of homophobic attacks.
The signatories to the so-called “principle six” campaign – named after the clause in the Olympic charter that supposedly guarantees non-discrimination – include the American snowboarding gold medallist Seth Wescott, the Sochi-bound Canadian biathlete Rosanna Crawford and the Australian four-man bobsled team.
Other famous former Olympians who are backing the call include the tennis players Martina Navratilova and Andy Roddick, the former Leeds United footballer Robbie Rogers, and the four-time gold-medal-winning diver Greg Louganis.
“As an athlete, as an American, and as a believer in equal rights and equal opportunity for everyone, I realised I needed to speak up because that’s not where we are today in sports,” the American rower Esther Lofgren, a gold medallist at London 2012, told the Guardian. “The mission is to support all athletes to be themselves and be free to be athletes.”
Megan Rapinoe, who won gold in the women’s football in London, said she believed the IOC should have done more and made it clear that this was not a political issue but a basic question of human rights.