
Russia Pulls Gymnasts from Romanian World Cup After Hosts Bar National Symbols
The Russian rhythmic gymnastics team withdrew from the World Challenge Cup in Cluj-Napoca after local organisers, defying a recent World Gymnastics ruling, banned the display of the Russian flag and anthem.
The Russian rhythmic gymnastics squad abandoned the World Challenge Cup in Cluj-Napoca on the eve of competition, after Romanian organisers informed them verbally that neither the Russian flag would be raised nor the national anthem played in the event of a victory. The team’s withdrawal, announced by the Russian Gymnastics Federation on 26 June, came just days after the same athletes had competed under their full national symbols at a World Challenge Cup leg in China, where they collected ten medals, four of them gold.
The flashpoint was a public intervention by Emil Boc, the mayor of Cluj-Napoca, who declared on social media that “the political symbols of an aggressor state in Europe” would not be permitted inside the BT Arena. That stance directly contradicted a May decision by the sport’s global governing body, World Gymnastics, which voted to readmit Russian and Belarusian gymnasts with their flags and anthems, ending a four-year ban imposed after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Russian federation described the organisers’ move as a “gross violation” of competition regulations, the World Gymnastics statutes and the updated Olympic Charter, and said it would pursue all available international legal mechanisms to enforce compliance.
Viewed from Moscow, the incident is the latest in a series of localised refusals by European Union member states to implement the full reinstatement of Russian athletes. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the situation “outrageous”, while sports minister Mikhail Degtyarev pledged to seek the stripping of Romania’s right to host not only gymnastics events but “all international competitions”. The Ukrainian Gymnastics Federation, for its part, had already condemned the World Gymnastics ruling in May, vowing it would “not accept” the return of Russian symbols.
The Russian team’s withdrawal leaves the Cluj-Napoca event without the sport’s dominant nation, which won every Olympic rhythmic gymnastics team gold between 2000 and 2016. The federation stated that its gymnasts remain ready to compete wherever World Gymnastics rules are respected, a position that now places the onus on the international federation to reconcile its own regulations with the political realities of host cities. The immediate sporting consequence is a truncated field in Romania, while the broader standoff threatens to disrupt the reintegration of Russian athletes into the international calendar just as the post-ban era was beginning.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
The Russian team pulled out of the World Cup in Romania after organisers banned the flag and anthem, a direct breach of the International Federation's May decision. The Kremlin calls the situation outrageous, and the sports minister vows to do everything possible to strip Romania of the right to host international events. The boycott is framed as a necessary defence of national dignity and sporting regulations.
Russian gymnasts withdrew from the World Cup in Romania after local organisers said they would not display the flag or play the anthem. The Russian federation cited a breach of regulations and pointed to the world body's readmission decision. The event continues without Russian participation.
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