The governing body has maintained one of international sport’s broadest exclusions of Russian and Belarusian participation, showing that athletics remains a visible arena of institutional pressure over the invasion of Ukraine.
World Athletics has reaffirmed its exclusion of Russian and Belarusian athletes, officials and support personnel from international competition, maintaining sanctions first imposed after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in March 2022.
The decision was taken at the organisation’s 241st Council meeting, held by video conference on 1–2 July, after members considered possible changes to the existing restrictions. In its official statement published on 3 July, the governing body said the Council chose to preserve the position reviewed in 2023, 2025 and again in March 2026.
The outcome keeps athletics apart from parts of the international sporting system that have moved towards broader neutral participation. Its significance therefore extends beyond eligibility rules. It shows how global institutions continue to make different political and ethical judgements about whether Russian and Belarusian representatives can return while the war continues.
A ban tied explicitly to the invasion
World Athletics’ exclusion covers athletes as well as officials and supporting personnel. That breadth makes it more consequential than rules that allow competitors to take part individually under a neutral designation while excluding national flags and anthems.
Russia also has a separate history of athletics sanctions related to state-sponsored doping and institutional governance. The present exclusion, however, is explicitly connected to the invasion of Ukraine and includes Belarus because of its support for Russia and the use of Belarusian territory in the war.
The Council was presented with options for updating the sanctions. It instead reaffirmed the existing decision while continuing work on a possible conditional pathway for future participation.
World Athletics President Sebastian Coe described the review as methodical and consequential. The governing body has not treated reinstatement as automatic or dependent solely on the policies of other sports federations.
Sport remains part of sanctions diplomacy
Sporting exclusions are not economic sanctions and do not operate through the legal systems used to freeze assets or restrict trade. Their power is reputational and institutional. International competition offers states visibility, prestige and a means of presenting national normality. Exclusion denies that platform.
For Ukraine and its supporters, allowing Russian participation while attacks continue risks separating sport from the conduct of the state it represents. Critics of blanket bans argue that individual athletes should not be held responsible for government decisions, particularly where they have not publicly supported the war.
That tension explains the development of neutral-athlete frameworks elsewhere. Such systems attempt to distinguish individuals from national representation, but they create difficult verification questions. Governing bodies must decide how to assess military affiliation, state funding, public statements and links to sanctioned institutions.
World Athletics has chosen a clearer, stricter line. It reduces the ambiguity of individual screening but imposes a wider collective consequence.
Belarus remains linked to Russia’s international isolation
The continued inclusion of Belarus is politically important. Minsk has not committed regular forces to the invasion on the same scale as Russia, but it has provided territory, infrastructure and political support. International institutions have therefore frequently treated the two countries together.
EU Global has examined how Belarus has returned to Ukraine’s security calculations as Kyiv watches the possibility of renewed pressure from the north. The athletics decision reflects the same broader reality: Belarus’s alignment with Moscow carries consequences even where its direct role differs.
The contrast with other sporting bodies
International sport has not maintained a uniform response to the war. Some federations have gradually admitted neutral athletes under restrictive criteria; others have restored access in stages or delegated decisions to event organisers. The Olympic movement has also wrestled with how to balance individual rights, national representation and the political neutrality it claims for sport.
World Athletics’ decision preserves a prominent counterexample. Track and field is a major component of global competition and the Olympic programme, so the absence of Russian and Belarusian participants remains highly visible.
The policy will continue to face legal, ethical and practical pressure. A conditional return pathway may eventually become more detailed, particularly if the diplomatic environment changes. For now, the Council has concluded that the circumstances which produced the ban have not changed sufficiently to justify easing it.
That makes the decision a form of continuing institutional judgement on the war. It does not alter battlefield conditions, but it denies Moscow and Minsk an important route back to international normality. At a time when sanctions fatigue and selective re-engagement are increasingly debated, World Athletics has decided that exclusion should remain.



