- Biden proposes huge expansion of weight loss drug access
- Saudi 2025 budget sees lower deficit on spending trims
- Pogba's brother, five others, on trial for blackmailing him
- Prosecutors seek up to 15-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Emery bids to reverse Villa slump against Juventus
- Carrefour attempts damage control against Brazil 'boycott'
- Namibians heads to the polls wanting change
- Sales of new US homes lowest in around two years: govt
- Paris mayor Hidalgo says to bow out in 2026
- Stocks, dollar mixed on Trump tariff warning
- ICC to decide fate of Pakistan's Champions Trophy on Friday
- Man Utd revenue falls as Champions League absence bites
- Russia vows reply after Ukraine strikes again with US missiles
- Trump threatens trade war on Mexico, Canada, China
- Motta's injury-hit Juve struggling to fire ahead of Villa trip
- Cycling chiefs seek WADA ruling on carbon monoxide use
- Israel pounds Beirut as security cabinet to discuss ceasefire
- Fewest new HIV cases since late 1980s: UNAIDS report
- 4 security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood Pakistan capital
- Four bodies, four survivors recovered from Egypt Red Sea sinking: governor
- Ayub century helps Pakistan crush Zimbabwe, level series
- French court cracks down on Corsican language use in local assembly
- Russia expels UK diplomat accused of espionage
- Israeli security cabinet to discuss ceasefire as US says deal 'close'
- COP29 president blames rich countries for 'imperfect' deal
- No regrets: Merkel looks back at refugee crisis, Russia ties
- IPL history-maker, 13, who 'came on Earth to play cricket'
- Prosecutors seek up to 12-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Laos hostel staff detained after backpackers' deaths
- Hong Kong LGBTQ advocate wins posthumous legal victory
- Rod Stewart to play Glastonbury legends slot
- Winter rains pile misery on war-torn Gaza's displaced
- 'Taiwan also has baseball': jubilant fans celebrate historic win
- Russia pummels Ukraine with 'record' drone barrage
- Paul Pogba blackmail trial set to open in Paris
- Landmine victims gather to protest US decision to supply Ukraine
- Indian rival royal factions clash outside palace
- Manga adaptation 'Drops of God' nets International Emmy Award
- Philippine VP denies assassination plot against Marcos
- Hong Kong's legal battles over LGBTQ rights: key dates
- US lawmakers warn Hong Kong becoming financial crime hub
- Compressed natural gas vehicles gain slow momentum in Nigeria
- As Arctic climate warms, even Santa runs short of snow
- Plastic pollution talks: the key sticking points
- Indonesia rejects Apple's $100 million investment offer
- Pakistan police fire tear gas, rubber bullets at pro-Khan supporters
- Hong Kong same-sex couples win housing, inheritance rights
- Indonesia digs out as flooding, landslide death toll hits 20
- Liverpool's old guard thriving despite uncertain futures
- Mbappe takes reins for Real Madrid in Liverpool clash
RBGPF | 1.33% | 61 | $ | |
RIO | -1.78% | 61.876 | $ | |
SCS | -1.59% | 13.505 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.65% | 24.57 | $ | |
NGG | -0.71% | 62.815 | $ | |
RELX | 0.36% | 46.74 | $ | |
GSK | -0.65% | 33.93 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.44% | 6.8 | $ | |
BTI | 0.56% | 37.54 | $ | |
BCE | -1.71% | 26.566 | $ | |
JRI | -0.52% | 13.301 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.74% | 24.4 | $ | |
AZN | -0.17% | 66.29 | $ | |
VOD | -0.51% | 8.865 | $ | |
BP | -1.59% | 28.86 | $ | |
BCC | -3.38% | 147.515 | $ |
Sporting sanctions can land significant blow on Putin, say experts
Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup, the scandal-plagued 2014 Winter Olympics and Gazprom's sponsorship of the Champions League were powerful tools for the country's global image and gained Vladimir Putin prestige amongst the Russian population.
However, the Russian president's decision to invade Ukraine has resulted in destroying the warm global afterglow and experts believe it could cost him dearly internally.
Saint Petersburg has already been stripped of hosting this year's Champions League final with Gazprom's reported 40-million-euro ($45 million) a year sponsorship deal with UEFA also in doubt.
The Russian Formula One Grand Prix has been cancelled and there are calls for the country's football team to be expelled from the 2022 World Cup play-offs.
"Sport has always had a tremendous impact on society," Michael Payne, former head of marketing at the International Olympic Committee (IOC), told AFP.
"The South African sports boycott over apartheid probably had as much or greater impact than economic sanctions, over forcing regime policy change."
For Hugh Robertson, Chairman of the British Olympic Association (BOA), a blanket sports ban could affect Putin's standing domestically.
"Sport is disproportionately important to absolutist regimes," he told AFP.
"The potential inability to compete would hit Russia hard."
Payne, who in nearly two decades at the IOC was widely credited with transforming its brand and finances through sponsorship, said Putin risked his standing with his own people.
"Putin may not care what the rest of the world thinks of him, but he has to care what the Russian people think of him," said the Irishman.
"Lose their support and it is game over -– and the actions of the sports community has the potential to be a very important influencer towards the Russian people."
- 'A greater good' -
Prominent Russian sports stars have not been shy in voicing their disquiet over Putin's invasion.
Andrey Rublev, who won the Dubai ATP title on Saturday, veteran Russian football international Fedor Smolov, United States-based ice hockey great Alex Ovechkin and cyclist Pavel Sivakov, who rides for the Ineos team have all expressed a desire for peace.
"Russian athletes speaking out to their national fan base, will only serve to further prompt the local population to question the actions of their leadership, and undermine the local national support for the war," said Payne.
However, another former IOC marketing executive Terrence Burns, who since leaving the organisation has played a key role in five successful Olympic bid city campaigns, has doubts about their impact.
"You are making the assumption that Russian people actually see, read, and hear 'real news'," he told AFP.
"I do not believe that is the case. The Government will portray Russia as a victim of a great global conspiracy led by the USA and the West.
"It is an old Russian trope they have used quite effectively since the Soviet days."
Burns says sadly the athletes must also be punished for their government's aggression.
"I believe that Russia must pay the price for what it has done," he said.
"Sadly that has to include her athletes as well.
"Many people, like me, believed that by helping them host the Olympics and World Cup could somehow open and liberalise the society, creating new paths of progress for Russia's young people. Again we were wrong."
Robertson too says allowing Russians to compete when Ukrainians are unable to due to the conflict is "morally inconceivable."
Payne says individual sports have to look at a bigger moral picture than their own potential losses over cutting Russian sponsorship contracts.
"The sports world risks losing far more by not reacting, than the loss of one or two Russian sponsors."
Former British lawmaker Robertson, who as Minister for Sport and the Olympics delivered the highly successful 2012 London Games, agrees.
"The sporting world may have to wean itself off Russian money," said the 59-year-old.
"Over the past few days, it has become apparent that political, economic and trade sanctions will hurt the West as well as Russia but this is a price that we will have to pay to achieve a greater good."
For Robertson sport could not stand idly by in response to Russia's invasion.
"The Russian invasion of Ukraine will impact sport but the consequences of inaction, or prevarication, will be far more serious."
pi/dj
C.Amaral--PC