Putin suspended as president of International Judo Federation

Russian President Vladimir Putin, a judo blackbelt, is a keen practitioner of the discipline and has co-authored a book titled "Judo: History, Theory, Practice".

Putin, an accomplished judoka who was awarded an eighth dan in 2014 – one of the highest levels in the sport, has been honorary president since 2008.
Reuters

Putin, an accomplished judoka who was awarded an eighth dan in 2014 – one of the highest levels in the sport, has been honorary president since 2008.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been suspended as honorary president of the International Judo Federation (IJF) due to Russia's attack on Ukraine.

"In light of the ongoing war... in Ukraine, the International Judo Federation announces the suspension of Mr. Vladimir Putin's status as Honorary President and Ambassador of the International Judo Federation," read the IJF statement on Sunday.

Putin, an accomplished judoka who was awarded an eighth dan in 2014 – one of the highest levels in the sport, has been honorary president since 2008.

IJF president Marius Vizer lauded him back in 2014 as "the perfect ambassador for our sport".

Putin has made much of his fondness for keeping fit with judo and ice hockey.

READ MORE: Poland, Sweden refuse to play World Cup qualifiers with Russia

Putin's suspension comes on the back of a range of sporting punishments for Russia.

European football's governing body UEFA stripped Saint Petersburg of the hosting of the May 28 Champions League final – their most prestigious club competition – and Formula One cancelled the Russian Grand Prix scheduled for September 25.

Both Poland and Sweden have said they will not play Russia in the 2022 World Cup play-offs with the Swedish Government, hoping to persuade their 27 European Union partners to implement a blanket sporting ban.

This includes barring Russian athletes from competing on European Union soil.

The Russia-Ukrain conflict has entered a fourth day with Moscow ordering its troops to advance in Ukraine "from all directions", while the West responded late Saturday with sanctions that sought to cripple Russia's banking sector.

Ukrainian officials said 198 civilians, including three children, had been killed since Russia's attack early Thursday.

READ MORE: In pictures: Protesters worldwide stand up against Russian aggression

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