Olympians condemn IOC for statement on Iran’s execution of 19-year-old wrestler Saleh Mohammadi

Olympians condemn IOC for statement on Iran’s execution of 19-year-old wrestler Saleh Mohammadi

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Seven Olympic athletes from several countries, including three gold medalists, condemned the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for its response to the execution of Iranian wrestler Saleh Mohammadi.

After Mohammadi was allegedly hanged in public last week, the IOC issued a statement saying: “It is very difficult to comment on situations of people during a conflict or unrest in a country without the IOC being able to verify the often contradictory information…

“The IOC, as a non-governmental civil organization, has neither the mandate nor the ability to change the laws or political system of a sovereign country.”

Now, the seven Olympic athletes share their objections to the IOC not condemning Iran for the execution.

The IOC told News Digital that it stood by its original statement.

Nancy Hogshead, three-time US Olympic gold medalist swimmer

Nancy Hogshead

Olympic gold medalist Nancy Hogshead (Courtesy of XX-XY Athletics)

“I am stunned that the IOC was unable to denounce the murder of a teenage wrestler in Iran. The organizations that govern the Olympic Games are not political, but denouncing the murder of an athlete for political purposes is not political… it is simply doing the right thing,” Hogshead told News Digital.

“Olympians deserve better. The IOC can and must oppose the execution of athletes by violent regimes for political purposes.”

Tyler Clary, American swimmer, gold medalist at London 2012

tyler clary

Tyler Clary celebrates winning gold in the men’s 200m backstroke final at the Olympic Games on August 2, 2012 in London. (Christophe Simon/News via Getty Images)

“The IOC statement seems like corporate damage control, not moral leadership,” Clary told News Digital.

“Hiding behind neutrality and bureaucracy is not leadership, it is evasion. The IOC says it has no authority to influence sovereign nations, but it has never hesitated to take strong positions when it suits its interests. To suddenly claim impartiality when an athlete dies shows a lack of guts and an inability to defend the very people who make the Olympic movement possible.”

Maciej Czyzowicz, Olympic gold medal pentathlete from Poland in Barcelona 1992

Maciej Czyzowicz

Poland Maciej Czyzowicz, gold medalist in the Pentathlon (Courtesy of Maciej Czyzowicz)

“The lack of action and resolve by the International Olympic Committee is scandalous. Iran should be excluded from the Olympic Games for its behavior unless the regime is overthrown and new leadership comes to power,” Czyzowicz told News Digital.

“If the IOC cannot defend the life of an innocent teenage athlete, it has completely lost all moral credibility. With this statement they showed that they do not care if any of the countries in the Olympic movement violate human and civil rights.”

Keith Sanderson, American Olympic shooter, four-time Olympian

Keith Sanderson

Keith Sanderson during the Olympic Games at the Royal Artillery Barracks on August 3, 2012 in London. (Lars Baron/Getty Images)

“This is normal at the IOC. They enrich themselves at the expense of athletes and they can’t even stand up and say that any regime, including Iran, that murders a teenage athlete is categorically wrong,” Sanderson told News Digital.

“The IOC has been known for years to be corrupt, but this is off limits. If the IOC wants to show any shred of morality or credibility, it should denounce this murder and impose sanctions on Iran until it changes its leadership or apologizes for this brutal execution.”

Rubén González, Argentine Olympic bobsled athlete, four-time Olympian

Ruben Gonzalez

Rubén González of Argentina finishes the final men’s individual bobsled race at the Winter Olympics on February 14, 2010 in Whistler, Canada. (Clive Mason/Getty Images)

“The IOC’s refusal to speak out against Iran for killing the teenage fighter is shameful. But that’s how they’ve always been. All they care about is themselves,” Gonzalez told News Digital. “As far as the IOC is concerned, athletes are simply pawns to enable it to make profits. Time and time again, it has put its own interests before the athletes it claims to represent. If the IOC has any integrity left, it should publicly condemn the act and take decisive action against Iran.”

Katie Uhlaender, American skeleton athlete, five-time Olympian

Katie Uhlaender poses for a photo in September 2017

Katie Uhlaender poses for a photo during the 2018 US Olympic Team media summit on September 25, 2017. (Kevin Jairaj/USA Today Sports)

“The IOC’s claim that they are simply a ‘civil organization’ is a convenient excuse for inaction. They used it to avoid responsibility for the Russian state-sponsored doping crisis, and they are using it now regarding the safety of Iranian athletes. Whether it’s doping in China, competition rigging in Canada, or American skaters’ stolen moments in 2022, the pattern is the same: the IOC is unable or unwilling to protect the people who make the events possible. Games”. Uhlaender told News Digital.

“If the IOC insists that athlete protection is a state responsibility, then the United States has the opportunity to lead by example heading into Los Angeles 2028. It is time to stop waiting and start setting the standard for athlete safety and integrity ourselves.”

Eli Bremer, American modern pentathlete in Beijing 2008

Eli Bremer

Eli Bremer celebrates at the Olympic Games on August 21, 2008 in Beijing, China. (Nick Laham/Getty Images)

“I have believed that the IOC has been morally bankrupt for years and therefore did not have particularly high expectations for them. That said, I assumed that the murder of a teenage athlete at the hands of his own country would be something that even the IOC could discover and report,” Bremer told News Digital.

“The fact that they can’t come out and say that Iran’s murder of this teenager who had become a national icon is wrong just confirms how completely out of touch this organization is. I think sports organizations in general should stay out of politics. But they can and should stand up for their basic humanity and say that murdering athletes is wrong. The fact that the IOC can’t do this says a lot about them.”

Afsoon Roshanzamir Johnston, Iranian-born Team USA women’s Olympic wrestling coach at Rio 2016

“As an Iranian-born athlete, coach and pioneer for women in wrestling, I am deeply disappointed by the International Olympic Committee’s recent statement regarding the execution of 19-year-old wrestler Saleh Mohammadi,” Johnston told News Digital.

“By framing its role as a ‘non-governmental organisation’ without a mandate to influence national affairs, the IOC is moving away from the very principles of the Olympic charter. The charter aims to promote a ‘peaceful society, concerned with the preservation of human dignity’, but when a young champion is barbarically and publicly hanged through a state-sanctioned execution, ‘quiet diplomacy’ feels painfully inadequate.

“Political neutrality should not result in passivity when athletes face state-sanctioned terrorist brutality. Such a ‘safe’ response sends a worrying message to athletes in Iran and elsewhere; that the athlete’s life and safety are secondary to organizational protocol.

“We don’t need the IOC to change the laws of a country, we need them to stand up and use their immense platform to support and help protect athletes.”

What happened to Saleh Mohammadi?

Mohammadi was killed in a public hanging on Thursday, according to Iranian American dissidents and human rights activists.

Iran International reported that Iran’s regime hanged Mohammadi and two other Iranian men, Mehdi Ghasemi and Saeed Davoudi, “after being accused of killing two police officers during nationwide protests earlier this year,” the judiciary-linked Mizan news agency reported.

Mohammadi previously told the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting that his dream was to be an Olympic champion.

Mohammadi won a bronze medal in September 2024 in Iran’s national wrestling at the Saytiyev International Cup in Krasnoyarsk, Russia.

News Digital’s Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report.

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Jackson Thompson is a sports reporter for News Digital covering critical political and cultural issues in sports, with an investigative lens. Jackson’s reporting has been cited in federal government actions related to Title IX enforcement and in mainstream media outlets such as The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The News and ESPN.com.

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