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Olympians could be stripped of medals for breaching rules on expression

Guidance has been issued to athletes on how breaches of Rule 50 will be evaluated at the Games.

Athletes who breach rules on expression at Tokyo 2020 could be stripped of medals and disqualified from the Games where the protest is deemed disruptive or against fundamental Olympic principles.

The International Olympic Committee has issued updated guidelines to competitors regarding Rule 50, which covers their rights to freedom of expression including gestures such as taking the knee.

A survey on athletes' attitudes to Rule 50 was conducted by the IOC's Athletes Commission earlier this year, and it recommended to the IOC that protests during competition on the field of play, at official ceremonies, including medal presentations, and in the Olympic Village should continue to be prohibited.

The decision to keep the rule in place was criticised by athletes and governing bodies, including the global union for professional footballers FIFPRO which said it supported an athletes' right to take a stand on matters of social justice or positive societal change "wherever they may choose to do so".

Athletes have now been given advice on what will happen if the guidelines are not respected.

They may be subject to disciplinary proceedings, the guidelines state, depending on a variety of factors.

These include the degree of disruption caused by the behaviour, whether the expression advocated national, racial or religious hatred or incited discrimination or violence, whether disciplinary action is necessary "to protect the values of Olympism", whether it was an isolated incident, whether it was a voluntary act or the individual was coerced, and whether a complaint was made by another athlete about the behaviour.

The guidelines state: "Disciplinary consequences for participants may be as set out in the Olympic Charter and will depend in part on the findings of the above evaluation.

"Participants may expect that any sanction will be proportionate to the level of disruption and the degree to which the infraction is not compatible with the Olympic values, including the fundamental principles of Olympism."

In the section of the Olympic Charter dealing with measures and sanctions, it states sanctions can include temporary and permanent ineligibility or exclusion from the Olympic Games, disqualification or withdrawal of accreditation.

It continues: "In the event of disqualification or exclusion, the medals and diplomas obtained in relation to the relevant infringement of the Olympic Charter shall be returned to the IOC."

The new guidance sets out where athletes can express their views during the Games. These include the mixed zone, during press conferences, team meetings, social media and on the field of play prior to competition, provided it is "consistent with the fundamental principles of Olympism", not targeted against people, countries or organisations, not disruptive or prohibited by the athlete's national Olympic committee or international federation.

IOC athletes' commission chair Kirsty Coventry said: "While the guidelines offer new opportunities for athletes to express themselves prior to the competition, they preserve the competitions on the field of play, the ceremonies, the victory ceremonies and the Olympic Village.

"This was the wish of a big majority of athletes in our global consultation."

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Olympic medal table header
CountryGold medalSilver MedalBronze MedalT
JapanJapan124521
ChinaChina115824
United StatesUnited States1011930
Olympics flagOlympic Athletes from Russia78520
AustraliaAustralia61916
Great BritainGreat Britain56516
Today's Olympic highlights header

Wednesday's key events


ROWING
· Team GB have dominated the men's coxless fours in recent Olympics, winning on each of the last five occasions, but this year they face some stiff competition. They are one of four rowing medal contenders for Great Britain today (2.10am)

SWIMMING
· Katie Ledecky and Ariarne Titmus face off again in the women's 200m freestyle final, with the latter having already come out on top in the 400m event (2.41am)
· Team GB's Abbie Wood is among the medal contenders in the women's 200m individual medley final, while teammate Alicia Wilson will also take part. USA's Kate Douglass was the fastest qualifier, while world and Olympic record holder Katinka Hosszu is also involved (3.45am)
· Katie Ledecky could make it two golds in one morning as she goes into the 1500m freestyle final as heavy favourite, having broken the Olympic record in qualifying (3.54am)
· Team GB were by far the fastest qualifiers for the men's 4x200m freestyle relay final and will therefore be favourites for another gold in the pool (4.26am)

RUGBY SEVENS
· Team GB take on New Zealand in the first men's semi-final, having been beaten by reigning champions Fiji but then come from behind to overcome USA on day two (3am)
· The sevens gold medal match takes place at Tokyo Stadium, with the winner of Great Britain vs. New Zealand taking on either Argentina or Fiji (10am)

ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS
· Joe Fraser and James Hall compete for Team GB in the men's all-around final (11.15am-2.10pm)

CYCLING
· Anna Shackley will take part in the women's road time trial (from 3.30am)
· Geraint Thomas and Tao Geoghegan Hart have medal ambitions for Great Britain in the men's road time trial, although both will need to recover from the crash they suffered on Saturday (6am)

DIVING
· Jack Laugher bids to retain his men's 3m synchro diving title alongside new partner Daniel Goodfellow (7am)

EQUESTRIAN
· Charlotte Dujardin will look to add to her already legendary status with a third successive Olympic individual dressage title (9.30am-1.25pm)

> Today's schedule in full
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