World Ice Hockey Championship in Belarus

World Ice Hockey Championship in Belarus: Evil or
Opportunity?
26 September 2012 | Andrei Yeliseyeu
Published at BelarusDigest
_______________________________
This week the General Congress of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) in
Tokyo may come back to the issue of 2014 Championship in Belarus. But despite an
international campaign to move the Championship out of Belarus, the relocation is highly
unlikely.
Given the strong opposition of IIHF Council and reluctance of national ice hockey associations
to this idea, campaigners for the relocation should rather start thinking how to use the sport event
to spread their cause, rather than keep investing in the campaign with an extremely low chances
of success.
European Parliament and US Senate called to pull the 2014 Championship out of Belarus unless
authorities release all political prisoners. However the Council, IIHF's executive body, strongly
opposes the idea of depriving Belarus of its right to host the championship.
“We should not be used as puppets for politicians or activists; sport cannot and should not be a
political tool”, - IIHF head René Fasel expressed the Council's view in May 2012. A similar call
from yet another prestigious international body (OSCE Parliamentary Assembly) that followed
in early July, and additional European reaction that may follow yet another rigged parliamentary
election, is hardly to change the view of the IIHF executives.

On the other hand, the ultimate body to decide is not the Council but the IIHF Congress, IIHF's
highest legislative organ, and theoretically there is time left for the decision to be made.
Besides the semi-annual Congress that is taking place in Tokyo these days, two Congresses are
to be held in 2013, until planned Championship in Minsk. However, the chances are extremely
low that the voting (if it eventually takes place) would result in changing Belarus as a host
country, basic calculations shows.
According to the IIHF rules, the Congress decides on relocation by simple majority, with 52
representatives of national ice hockey associations and 11 Council members entitled to vote.
Thus, if quorum in place and all the Congress representatives cast a ballot, then 32 votes in
favour are needed for the decision to be definitely adopted. Among 27 EU member states, 23
national ice hockey associations are full members (all except Portugal, Greece, Cyprus and
Malta). Along with the USA and Canada, this makes only 25.
Therefore, for a definite majority, not only ice hockey associations of all EU member states and
North American democracies should vote in favour, but also (reasonably), of states associated
with the EU and other democracies like Croatia, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein,
plus Australia and New Zealand. However, sport matters differ from politics and such level of
support to the relocation by democratic states is hard to expect.
Indeed, national ice hockey associations seem to be very reluctant to move the relocation issue
forward. At previous Congress in Helsinki no one even raised the issue of replacing the 2014


Championship, despite a year-long lobbying efforts made, including by ex-hockey star Peter
Štastný, now member of the European Parliament and an active advocate for the relocation.

Campaign Shortages: Too Many Priorities and Weak Reasoning
Although the cause of the relocation campaigners is noble and Belarus, beyond any doubt, lacks
respect for even basic human rights, the campaign as such seems somewhat murky and
inconsistent.
First, the matter of prioritising. Campaigners made the championship conditional not only on the
political prisoners release, but a number of other preconditions that are hardly realistic for the
authorities to implement in near future. They include, among others, a moratorium or death
penalty abolition and improvement of registration procedures for independent NGOs and
political parties.
This is a comprehensible intention given that most of the campaigners are human rights
organisations, including Norwegian Helsinki Committee. However, adding many democracy
and human rights preconditions seems to compromise the idea of an effective pressing on the
regime.
In the given case a limited priority (political prisoners release and rehabilitation) would be a
more reasonable attempt to bring a change. Death penalty abolition is a an especially awkward
precondition taking into account other IIHF member countries with death penalty also hosting
world ice hockey championships.

Second, weak and misleading reasoning why mix of sport and politics in this case would have a
positive implication. In the letter to the IIHF Congress the campaign's intention is explained by
"the most alarming human rights crisis" since country's independence. According to the petition,
a removal of the championship from Belarus would allegedly support the victims of human
rights violations, without a basic explanation how.
The argument on regime legitimisation is worth a closer consideration. In terms of external
legitimisation, hosting a sport event would hardly contribute to the legitimisation in the eyes
of international community. Apartheid regime in South Africa didn't acquire additional support
on international arena because of the Formula One competition (partly boycotted though) in
1985.
Internal legitimisation here probably matters more, with hockey being a favourite Lukashenka's
sport and well-spread state media propaganda. These more detailed points on legitimisation are
not in the on-line petition though. It only says that hosting a prestigious sport event
would “support and legitimise a regime”.

Championship as an Opportunity to Make a Difference
Failed relocation of the championship is not a reason to lose heart for the friends of Belarus, but
to devise ideas how actually use it to influence the regime in a desired way.
First, Championship would revive discussions on the urgent need of visa regime facilitation
between Belarus and the EU. Russian authorities that are getting ready for the winter Olympics

in Sochi in 2014 have already announced a possible temporary visa-free regime for the
foreigners. Belarus may follow the move if it wants to see its arenas and hotels full of Western
tourists, not only CIS countries' citizens.

By the way, in the letter to the IIHD Congress the relocation campaign promises to “campaign
for visa charges to be waved for Belarusians if the championship is relocated”. Quite opposite,
holding the championship would help making the visa issue more visible and press the
government for prompt negotiations with the EU on visa regime facilitation.
Second, saying that to hold the championship means IIHF reward of Lukashenka's crackdown on
freedom of expression means a deliberate surrender to the regime in communication sphere.
There is a need of a good communication strategy to tell the Belarusian public that international
community and hockey stars stand up for human rights, and holding a tournament has nothing to
do with accepting Lukashenka's political practices.
Third, the tournament would put the spotlight on Belarus. Political prisoners and torture is not
something apparently visible to foreigners on arrival to Minsk. There is a need for the global
press not to miss an opportunity to highlight the sensible issues that surround sport and politics
in Belarus.
In the end of the day, the world championship is not hosting a local football game where police
lawlessness is a common occurrence. Imagine press stories and scandalous pictures with security
officers or policemen forcefully dragging the hockey fans with white-red-white flags out of the

arena. Either Belarusian authorities accept the championship as a certain 'iceland of freedom', or
show themselves in a very unpleasant way to the hockey partners and world hockey community
as a whole.

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