Russia escalates dispute with Romania over Cluj gymnastics ban

Russia escalates diplomatic row over Cluj gymnastics ban, threatens to strip Romania of major sporting events
The Kremlin escalated its confrontation with Romanian authorities on Friday after Cluj-Napoca’s decision to bar Russian athletes from displaying national symbols at the FIG World Challenge Cup of Rhythmic Gymnastics, with Moscow vowing to seek the exclusion of Romania from hosting international competitions. Russian Sports Minister and Olympic Committee President Mikhail Degtyarev announced that Russia will formally petition international federations to remove Romania’s right to stage future tournaments, calling the Cluj measure “a political provocation” that sets a dangerous precedent.
The dispute erupted on Wednesday when Cluj-Napoca Mayor Emil Boc declared that the Russian flag and national anthem would be prohibited inside BTarena during the four-day event, which concludes Saturday. The mayor framed the ban as a security measure aligned with European sanctions policy, though he did not cite specific legal provisions. The decision immediately drew condemnation from Moscow, where Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov branded the restriction “scandalous and arbitrary,” telling the state-run TASS agency that Russian athletes were being treated as “second-class competitors.”
Romanian critics of the ban also weighed in. Former Sports Minister Eduard Novak warned that the Cluj precedent could backfire, telling HotNews.ro that barring Russian participation risked isolating Romania within international sport governance and damaging its reputation as a reliable host. “Refusing Russian athletes creates a negative precedent that will be used against us in future bids,” Novak said.
Degtyarev doubled down on Friday, telling TASS that Russia would file formal objections with the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) and other governing bodies, arguing that the Cluj decision violated the Olympic Charter’s principle of universality. “We will do everything necessary so that Romania loses the right to host international competitions,” he stated. A separate report by Digi24 quoted Degtyarev as saying the move should serve “as a lesson for the country’s small leaders,” a phrasing that echoed Soviet-era diplomatic rhetoric.
The World Challenge Cup, which opened Thursday, has proceeded without incident so far, though Russian athletes are competing under neutral accreditation and without national insignia. Organizers have not commented publicly on the political fallout, focusing instead on the sporting competition. The event concludes Saturday evening, but the diplomatic damage appears already done: Moscow has framed the Cluj decision as part of a broader Western campaign to exclude Russian sport, while Bucharest now faces the prospect of coordinated retaliation across multiple international federations.
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