Los Angeles 2028 chief Wasserman joins calls for Rule 50 to be amended

Los Angeles 2028 chief Wasserman joins calls for Rule 50 to be amended

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Casey Wasserman has added his voice to calls to change Rule 50 ©Getty Images

Los Angeles 2028 chairperson Casey Wasserman has reportedly written to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to advocate for changes to be made to the controversial Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter.

According to Sportico, in the letter, Wasserman urges the IOC to "amend the guidelines that support Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter to allow anti-racist advocacy on the Olympic stage".

Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter states: "No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas."

The IOC claims this is designed to protect the neutrality of sport and the Olympic Movement, but the policy has faced heavy criticism in recent months as athletes in a multitude of sports have shown support for the Black Lives Matter movement.

Per Sportico, Wasserman addressed the letter to IOC President Thomas Bach and urged him "to allow and encourage athletes to advocate against racism anywhere they can, including on and off the field of play".

Wasserman later added: "Being anti-racist is not political.

"Being anti-racist is central to our core human principles and, therefore, an embodiment of everything the Olympic Games symbolizes."

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The National Basketball Association this week became the latest league to include support for the Black Live Matter movement into its restart ©Getty Images

The IOC Athletes' Commission has launched a survey to canvass athletes' opinions on the subject, with the existing regulations looking increasingly unfeasible in the current climate and Bach admitting they could be reviewed.

Under Rule 50 guidelines developed by the Athletes' Commission and announced in January, competitors who demonstrate at the Games have been threatened with disciplinary action.

The United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee Athletes' Advisory Council is one of numerous bodies to have called on the IOC to scrap Rule 50, with the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport and Global Athlete others.

John Carlos - expelled from the US team at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico after he and Tommie Smith raised their fists on the podium in a Black Power salute to protest racism - is another prominent voice opposing Rule 50, with the image of he and Smith on the podium one of the most iconic in Olympic history.

insidethegames yesterday reported that a minute's silence at the Tokyo 2020 Opening Ceremony is among the options being considered by the IOC Athletes’ Commission as a compromise.

Wasserman chairs the Los Angeles 2028 Organising Committee and led the city's successful bid for the Games.

Los Angeles has previously hosted the Summer Olympics in 1932 and 1984.

By Ali Iveson 

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