PARIS, France – Russia’s top tennis player Anastasia Pavlyushenkova has expressed her “disagreement” with her country’s war in Ukraine and her inability to oppose it other than speaking on Twitter on Tuesday.
“I have been playing tennis since I was a child. I have always represented Russia. This is my home and my country. But now I’m scared, as are my friends and family. But I’m not afraid to say what I think. “I am against war and violence,” the 14th world wrote in a post on its Twitter account.
The 30-year-old also expressed her helplessness in the face of this situation: “I am not a politician, nor a public figure, I have no experience in these fields. “I can only disagree publicly with these decisions and talk about them openly.”
His speech comes as the ATP, the WTA and the ITF, the bodies that manage world tennis, have not yet announced possible sanctions against Russian and Belarusian players.
Sanctions on Russian athletes?
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) initially recommended that only Russian and Belarusian athletes be allowed to compete in a neutral emblem, before proposing their exclusion from sporting events on Monday.
Many national or international federations have since complied (skiing, biathlon, ice hockey, rugby, boxing, swimming, etc.) and Ukrainian player Elina Svitolina has announced that she will no longer play against Russian or Belarusian opponents. The ITF will not follow the ILO recommendations “to accept Russian or Belarusian nationals only as neutral athletes, without displaying the symbols, colors, flags or anthems of their nation.”
Pavlyuchenkova’s message, rare among Russian athletes, echoes that of her compatriot Andrey Rublev, No. 6 in the world, who called for “world peace” just hours after Russian troops entered Ukrainian territory.
Some other Russian athletes, such as cyclist Pavel Shivakov, footballer Fedor Smolov and, above all, ice hockey star Alex Ovetskin, have expressed their opposition to the war being waged by their country.
“Personal ambitions or political reasons cannot justify violence,” Pavlyuchenkova wrote before concluding: “Stop the violence, end the war. »
