PARIS: One of the major headaches, not just for the Paris 2024 organising committee but also for the International Olympic Committee, is how to handle the ongoing war in Ukraine. Some nations, with Ukraine the most vocal, have called for a blanket ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes, while others have given the green light for participation. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has called for a ban “while the war continues” in Ukraine while IOC president Thomas Bach is keen for a “pathway” that will allow the Russians and Belarusians to compete as neutrals, a stance that has the backing of the United States. The French government and the 2024 Olympic organisers, meanwhile, have largely sidestepped the row. “It’s up to the IOC to ultimately decide whether the Russian delegation will be allowed to participate in the Paris Olympics,” Organising Committee president Tony Estanguet said in February. It is over a year since Russian forces, aided by their ally Belarus, invaded Ukraine to start a war which is still going on at the cost of thousands of lives on both sides. Russia were barred from competing in many sports, and thrown out in the late stages of qualification for last year’s World Cup in Qatar. Russian athletes competing in individual sports such as tennis do so without having their nationality officially signified. It is this deal that Bach wants to bring to the table for the Olympics – Russians already took part in some events in the 2106 Games in Rio de Janeiro and at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and last year’s Beijing Winter Games under a neutral flag although that was due to sanctions for doping violations. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has led the calls for a total ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes and has called for a boycott of the Games if they are allowed to take part. “The mere presence of representatives of the terrorist state is a manifestation of violence and lawlessness,” Zelensky told a virtual summit of sports ministers chaired from London in February. “And it cannot be covered up with some pretended neutrality or a white flag. If the Olympic sports were killings and missile strikes, then you know which national team would occupy the first place,” he added. In a letter earlier in February, more than 30 countries, including France, Great Britain, Sweden, Poland, the United States and Canada, expressed concern about how the athletes could be neutral, particularly given the “strong links and affiliations between Russian athletes and the Russian military”. Bach’s desire for the athletes to compete as neutrals has been endorsed by Africa’s National Olympic Committees and their Asian counterparts. The French hosts, meanwhile, recognise the delicacy of the situation. President Emmanuel Macron has remained tight-lipped after Zelensky told him that Russian athletes had “no place” at the Games although government spokesman Olivier Veran, however, said in February that the matter could not drag on. “A decision (by the IOC) must be taken by the summer,” he said.