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INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE

Beijing launches bid for 2022 Winter Olympics

Beijing leaders on Tuesday handed over their official bid to stage the 2022 Winter Olympics to the Swiss-based IOC, heightening their battle with Kazakhstan's Almaty.

Beijing launches bid for 2022 Winter Olympics

The event is guaranteed to be staged in Asia as Beijing and Almaty are the only candidates.

The Lausanne-based International Olympic Committee (IOC) will make a final decision in July.

Liu Peng, chairman of the Chinese Olympic Committee, and Wang Anshun, chairman of the Beijing 2022 Bid Committee, presented the Chinese capital's financial and construction guarantees for the event at the IOC headquarters.

They made no immediate comment.

Almaty's sporting and bid leaders were to give their official guarantees to IOC officials later Tuesday.

Although China would stage some of the skiing events up to 220 kilometres from Beijing, the Chinese bid is considered the favourite because of the country's political clout within the Olympic movement.

Many of the officials who organized the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing have been drafted into the team fighting for the Winter Games.

Almaty has been seen from suffering from a lack of support from its strongman president Nursultan Nazarbayev.

But the government now appears behind the project.

Almaty was also a candidate for the 2014 Winter Olympics, which went to Russia's Sochi.

It staged the 2011 Asian Winter Games and has been chosen for the 2017 University Winter Games.

The European cities of Oslo, Stockholm, Krakow in Poland and Lviv in Ukraine all backed out of the contest because of public fears over the cost.

An IOC evaluation committee will go to Almaty on February 14th-18th and to Beijing from March 24th-28th.

The two cities will make presentations to the IOC in Lausanne in June and the IOC executive committee will decide the winner at a meeting in Kuala Lumpur on July 31st.

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RUSSIA

Russian athletes lose appeal over Olympics ban

Forty-seven Russians implicated in doping lost a last-minute court bid to take part in the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics on Friday, just hours before the opening ceremony.

Russian athletes lose appeal over Olympics ban
Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP
The applicants, who included Korean-born speed skater Victor An, had asked the Court of Arbitration for Sport to overturn an International Olympic Committee decision not to invite them to Pyeongchang.
   
“The applications filed by Russian athletes and coaches have been dismissed,” the CAS said in a statement.
   
The Russian situation has proved highly contentious in the build-up to Pyeongchang, after their team was banned but a certain number of “clean” Russian athletes were allowed to take part as neutrals.
   
Fifteen of those who lost their bids on Friday were among a group of 28 who controversially had life bans from the Olympics overturned last week by CAS, which cited insufficient evidence.
  
The other 32, including An, biathlon gold medallist Anton Shipulin and Sergei Ustyugov, a cross-country skiing world champion, were omitted from the list of Russians invited to Pyeongchang.
   
“In its decisions, the CAS arbitrators have considered that the process created by the IOC to establish an invitation list of Russian athletes to compete as Olympic Athletes from Russia (OAR) could not be described as a sanction but rather as an eligibility decision,” CAS said.
   
However, the CAS decision may not be the end of the matter. A source close to the IOC has told AFP that the 47 Russians have also lodged a case with a Swiss civil court in Lausanne.
   
A spokesman for the neutral Russian team, the 'Olympic Athletes from Russia', declined to comment when approached by AFP.