The International Olympic Committee has dismissed concerns over Russia's law banning gay "propaganda," saying it doesn't violate the Olympic Charter's anti-discrimination clause, and pronounced Russia ready to host the 2014 Winter Games.
Jean-Claude Killy, chairman of the IOC Coordination Commission, gave his stamp of approval during a news conference Thursday at the conclusion of the commission's 10th and final visit to Sochi before the games, which begin on Feb. 7.
Russia has come under scrutiny as the next host of the Olympics because of the law passed this summer outlawing "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations among minors," which many worry may apply to gay athletes and visitors to the games.
Killy said the commission deliberated for several days and concluded that "the IOC doesn't have the right to discuss the laws that are in place in the country hosting the games, so unless the charter is violated we are fully satisfied."
Russian officials insist the law is designed to protect children and doesn't infringe on the rights of gay people.
"Regarding this law, if people of traditional sexual orientation spread propaganda of nontraditional sex to children, then they will also be held accountable," said Dmitry Kozak, a deputy prime minister in charge of overseeing preparations for the Sochi Olympics. "So there is simply no need to talk about discrimination."
The Human Rights Campaign, the largest gay rights organization in the U.S., condemned the IOC's assessment of the Russian law.
"If this law doesn't violate the IOC's charter, then the charter is completely meaningless," HRC President Chad Griffin said in a statement. "The safety of millions of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) Russians and international travelers is at risk, and by all accounts the IOC has completely neglected its responsibility to Olympic athletes, sponsors and fans from around the world."
He noted that Killy spoke a day after gay rights activists were arrested for protesting the law outside the Moscow headquarters of the Sochi Olympics organizing committee.
President Vladimir Putin signed the ban on propaganda into law in late June. In August, he signed an additional decree banning all demonstrations and rallies in Sochi for two and a half months around the time of the games, a measure seen as intended to thwart protests by gay rights activists.
Killy said the IOC commission was pleased with the ongoing construction ahead of the games, which with a total cost of $51 billion will be the most expensive Olympics in history.
Much of the city still looks like an enormous building site, with unfinished hotels and debris from construction scattered along the Black Sea coast, but the Olympic sites are impressive.
The coastal venues, where the skating events will take place, are sprawled like beached metallic whales across what used to be a residential coastline. The structures themselves are both sleekly elegant and intimate, providing for a close proximity between athletes and spectators.
The mountain venues, about an hour by car or train from the coast, are similarly spectacular. A network of gondolas, like pulsing veins up the mountainside, whisk visitors up to 7,650 feet, while the smooth wood of the bobsleigh track zigzags across the lush forest. A blizzard on Wednesday coated the mountain peaks in snow, helping to ease worries of a repeat of last year's warm winter.
The IOC visit coincided with major storms, unusual for Sochi in September. Down the mountain, heavy rain caused flooding and mudslides, leading authorities to introduce a state of emergency.
Killy said that despite the rainfall there had been "no damage anywhere whatsoever" and that he was confident any weather problems "would not stop the games."
He recalled the IOC commission's first visit, in September 2011, and the "unprecedented challenge" Russia faced to put in the necessary infrastructure and build most of the venues from scratch.
"In Europe you would probably spend 15 years on that, and here they did it in seven," Killy said. Russia was awarded the 2014 Olympics in 2007.
Kozak asserted that only $7 billion had been spent on the venues themselves, and the remaining sum went toward "developing the city and the region" along the Black Sea.
The Associated Press
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