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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

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Two men sit inside a set of Olympic rings on display at the Olympic Park as preparations continue for the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics Photo: REUTERS

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.

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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.”

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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.

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