The national team has competed under neutral status at the world championships in Georgia
Russia’s two-time Olympic fencing champion, Yana Egorian, has won sabre gold at the World Championships in Georgia.
She was competing under a neutral banner, as the participation of Russian athletes has reportedly sparked protest, following the widespread international bans placed on them following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022
Having been recently permitted to compete in events the Russian fencing team has faced street protests and gestures from Ukrainian athletes throughout the championships in the Georgian capital Tbilisi at the weekend.
Egorian however, defeated Poland’s Zuzanna Cieslar in Sunday’s final, and subsequently told the Russian sports channel Match TV: “Russia, this is for you!”
During the day, protesters with Ukrainian and Georgian flags held an anti-Russian rally in front of the Olympic Arena in the Georgian capital. They chanted slogans targeting athletes such as Egorian and other Central Army Sports Club (CSKA) members with military ranks under Russia’s Defense Ministry, according to Interpress news.
Protesters displayed provocative banners, lit firecrackers near the Russian team’s hotel, and burned a Russian flag.
The Russian Interests Section at the Swiss embassy in Georgia issued a statement on Telegram on Saturday in which it denounced the protests as “Russophobic” which were intended to mobilize radicals and damage Tbilisi’s reputation a host.
Egorian, 31, was granted neutral competitor status in early July. She told Match TV she had been waiting six years for the competition, since her last international appearance at the 2019 world championships.
Alongside Egorian, Russian fencer Kirill Borodachev and the female skewers team won silver medals. Ukrainian medalists Vlada Kharkova and Alina Komashchuk boycotted a medal photo shoot that included Borodachev and Egorian.
In the run-up to the championships Ukrainian 2024 Olympic sabre champion Olga Kharlan – who did not attend the championships – demanded stricter rules for Russian neutral athletes, in an open letter published in her social media which was reportedly signed by 447 fencers. Kharlan was disqualified from the 2023 World Championships for refusing to shake hands with Russia’s Anna Smirnova.
Moscow has repeatedly objected to restrictions placed on Russian athletes. President Vladimir Putin slammed them as “ethnic discrimination” and a “violation of the Olympic Charter principles against politicizing sports.”