Special report: 2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, July 25 -- Iraq will not compete in the
Beijing Olympic Games because of government interference, the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) said Thursday.
The IOC suspended Iraq's National Olympic Committee
(NOC) in June after the Iraqi government dismissed and installed its own group,
chaired by the sports minister. The IOC told officials in Baghdad that it was
upholding the suspension.
The IOC Charter forbids political interference in the
Olympic movement.
A stalemate between the two sides meant Iraq missed
Wednesday's deadline to submit a team for the Aug¡£ 8-24 Games.
"The deadline for taking up places for Beijing for
all sports, except athletics has now passed," IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies
said. "The IOC very sadly has now to acknowledge that it is likely there will be
no Iraqi presence at the Beijing Games despite our best efforts."
Four Iraqi athletes were expected to compete in non
track-and-field sports - archery, judo, rowing and weightlifting. Their places
will be offered to athletes from other countries.
"Clearly, we'd very much like to have seen Iraq's
athletes in Beijing," Davies said. "We are very disappointed that the athletes
have been so ill-served by their own government's actions."
The IOC and Olympic Council of Asia jointly sent a
letter to Iraq's minister for youth and sport Jassem Mohammed Jaafar on
Wednesday, confirming Iraq's suspension "despite joint efforts ... over the past
few months to find a positive solution with Iraqi authorities".
Iraq's government said after the June 4 suspension
that it wanted to meet the IOC "to make its legitimate case".
It said the decision to dissolve the Olympic
committee was based on "solid evidence of blatant corruption, lack of legitimate
transparent electoral processes and accountability, and absence of ratified
legislation".
(Source: China Daily)