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NYT.Swede Stripped of His Medal After His Angry Reaction

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  • NYT.Swede Stripped of His Medal After His Angry Reaction

    Swede Stripped of His Medal After His Angry Reaction


    By JER?Ã? LONGMAN
    Published: August 16, 2008

    BEIJING - The International Olympic Committee stripped the bronze
    medal Saturday from a Swedish wrestler who had complained about the
    judging in his Greco-Roman competition and had discarded his medal
    during the awards ceremony in protest.

    The wrestler, Ara Abrahamian, was disqualified for violating the
    spirit of fair play of the Games and had his athlete's credential
    revoked, according to the I.O.C.

    A contentious penalty that cost him a chance to compete for a gold
    medal in the middleweight division Thursday left Abrahamian
    furious. News reports said that he had to be restrained from wrestling
    officials after the incident. He later won a bronze medal in a
    consolation match, but did not participate in the full medal ceremony.

    The Associated Press said that Abrahamian dropped the bronze on the
    mat as he walked away from the medal podium, while Bloomberg News said
    that he put the medal on the floor. Abrahamian had finished second at
    the 2004 Athens Olympics after a similarly disputed call.

    In a disciplinary hearing Friday, Abrahamian said he had been a victim
    of `blatant errors in judging.' The I.O.C. accused him of violating
    two rules of the Olympic Charter than ban demonstrations in official
    Olympic areas and prohibit the showing of disrespect for other Olympic
    athletes.

    `The awards ceremony is a highly symbolic ritual,' the I.O.C. said in
    a statement. `Any disruption by any athlete, in particular a medalist,
    is in itself an insult to the other athletes and to the Olympic
    movement.'

    Abrahamian had made `serious unsubstantiated allegations' against
    Greco-Roman wrestling's international governing body, and had never
    offered an apology for his actions during the ceremony, the
    I.O.C. said.

    If he chooses, Abrahamian could appeal the disqualification to the
    Court of Arbitration for Sport.

    This was not the first time that athletes had been punished for
    protests during the Summer Games.

    At the 1992 Barcelona Games, a weight lifter named Ibragim Samadov,
    who was competing for the Unified Team of the former Soviet republics,
    refused to have his bronze medal placed around his neck because he was
    unhappy with his own performance. The medal was later revoked.

    Tommie Smith and John Carlos were expelled from the 1968 Mexico City
    Games after their glove-fisted salute during the awards ceremony for
    the 200-meter race. The expulsions have since come under immense
    criticism, and Smith and Carlos have drawn widespread praise for their
    nonviolent protest of social and racial inequality.
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