Bach 'disturbed' by Valieva show, rebukes organizers for politicization
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach addresses journalists during a press conference at the Main Media Center, Beijing, China, Feb. 18, 2022. (AFP Photo)


IOC President Thomas Bach said Friday he was disturbed by Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva's performance and it was "chilling" to see how the distraught teenager was treated by her coach after the meltdown in the Beijing Olympics final.

Bach said he was "very disturbed" to see 15-year-old Valieva's performance, having been controversially cleared to compete despite failing a drugs test in December.

"I was very disturbed when I watched it on TV," Bach said of the calamitous free skate routine which saw the pre-competition favorite finish fourth and miss out on a medal.

After a visibly upset Valieva finished her performance, her famously demanding coach Eteri Tutberidze repeatedly asked her teenage charge "why did you let it go?"

Tutberidze later put her arm around the skater when she was waiting for her results.

Russia's Kamila Valieva falls during her routine in the Beijing 2022 Winter Games figure skating final, Beijing, China, Feb. 17, 2022. (EPA Photo)

Bach said: "When I afterward saw how she was received by her closest entourage with what appeared to be such a tremendous coldness, it was chilling to see this, rather than giving her comfort, rather than try to help her."

The International Olympic Committee chief told a news briefing that seeing Valieva's Russian teammate Alexandra Trusova also highly agitated despite the 17-year-old winning silver confirmed his concerns about the entourage around the young skaters.

"I was pondering about whether you can be really so cold but when I saw and read today how Alexandra Trusova was being treated, I am afraid that this impression I had last night was not the wrong one.

"All of this does not give me much confidence in this close entourage of Kamila, neither with regard to what happened in the past nor as far as it concerns the future."

He said he hoped Valieva "has the support of her family, the support of her friends and the support of people who help her over this extremely difficult situation."

Bach reiterated that the IOC had asked the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) to investigate the coaches and advisors around Valieva.

In response to a question from a Russian journalist about whether the IOC bore some responsibility for what happened to Valieva, Bach said: "There is a positive A sample and this positive A sample has to be dealt with and we were not ignoring them.

"We are following the rule of law and we are dealing at the same time with a minor, with a 15-year-old girl who obviously has a drug in her body that should not be in her body.

Russia's Kamila Valieva (C) reacts after competing in the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games women's single free skating final, Beijing, China, Feb. 17, 2022. (AFP Photo)
"And the ones who have administered this drug in her body, these are the ones who are guilty."

The stumbling performance by Valieva was the latest chapter in a doping saga that began when Valieva's sample from Dec. 25 tested positive for trimetazidine.

It is a drug used to treat angina but is banned for athletes by the WADA because it can boost endurance.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled that Valieva could continue competing, but has not cleared her of doping.

The positive result was only revealed once the Beijing Games had begun and after Valieva had already helped the Russians win the team skating title.

The Valieva case has focused the spotlight on the participation of Russia at the Olympic Games.

Russia is already under sanctions for a massive state-sponsored doping program that reached its peak at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics. Russian athletes are competing in Beijing under the banner of the Russian Olympic Committee.

Beijing organizers rebuked

The IOC, in the meantime, called an immediate meeting with Chinese organizers to remind them to keep politics out of the Beijing Olympics, Bach said Friday after a local spokeswoman hit back at "lies" about Xinjiang.

"This problem we did not ignore," Bach said, a day after a spokeswoman for the local organizing committee, BOCOG, hit back at questions from foreign media about Taiwan and human rights in Xinjiang.

"We were in touch with BOCOG immediately after this press conference and then both organizations, BOCOG and the IOC have restated the unequivocal commitment to remain politically neutral, as it is required by the Olympic Charter."

The United States has led a diplomatic boycott by some Western nations at the Games over rights concerns in China, especially the fate of the mostly Muslim Uyghur minority in China's northwestern region of Xinjiang.

Campaigners say that at least 1 million Uyghurs and other Turkic-speaking Muslims have been incarcerated in camps in Xinjiang, while there are also allegations of forced sterilizations of women and forced labor.