Lukashenko Treats Sports 'like His Own Toy' 토토사이트 검증
The Olympics is finished, however the tale of probably the greatest dramatization - that of the Belarus competitor who surrendered from her country during the Games - isn't.
Krystsina Tsimanouskaya escaped to Poland last week after she said that her mentors attempted to drive her to run a race without wanting to, then, at that point attempted to compel her onto a plane back to Belarus when she rejected. On Monday (August 9) the nation's leader, Alexander Lukashenko said the 24-year old was, quote, "controlled" by outside powers.
In any case, Reuters has met another competitor, Konstantin Yakovlev, who likewise left Belarus with his family, this time for Ukraine - unintentionally around the same time as Tsimanouskaya's occurrence in Tokyo.
He's an expert handball player and mentor. He says he's contribution an uncommon depiction into the brandishing scene they've abandoned, and Lukashenko's job in it.
"He particularly alludes to sports like his own toy, and this toy started to oppose him, in a manner of speaking. It began doing things he didn't care for. During 26 years of rule, this man became acclimated to the entirety of his orders, any solicitations, should be executed. However, here, it's not the situation. It can't be like this. He's an ill-conceived president. He lost the races and this is clear to everybody. Also, it's moronic to imagine this didn't occur."
The obstruction that Yakovlev is alluding to are competitors that joined the political resistance after the nation's contested political decision - and the rough crackdown on fights that followed.
Proficient competitors are the absolute most noticeable figures to censure Lukashenko.
Some of them have lost their positions with the public authority or been started off public groups. Others were confined.
Yakovlev has a tattoo, of him in his uniform. The numbers 23 and 34 on the uniform are a reference to the article in Belarus' authoritative code under which he was confined for about fourteen days. He says they were exaggerated accusations.
He likewise reviews a second when his group won the public title back in 2007. They were going to take some time off, when rather they were advised to wait and put on an imagine practice meeting for an extraordinary guest: it was Lukashenko.
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"He came - we'd been hanging tight for him. It was a major show. We needed to put on our full outfits. In those days, we presumably dealt with it like it was fine, yet presently I see how odd it was. The games serve - it was Grigorov all things considered, came to us and said, 'Young men, kindly don't come up short.' There were directions about how we were unable to move toward him, such countless guidelines... In sports we've unquestionably made an enormous advance back, or even two, three, ten stages back. The result, all things considered, is the Olympics... I feel that the individual was bubbling over from treachery, from the idiocy of Belarusian officials."
Yakovlev says that when Lukashenko visited the group they had their photograph taken with him, yet weren't permitted to keep a duplicate on the grounds that the president didn't care for the manner in which he glanced in it.
The president was at one point the top of his country's public Olympic council. That title is currently held by his child, Viktor. Both were restricted from going to the Games.