Italy's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Infrastructure and Transport, Matteo Salvini attends the pre-homologation of the new Cortina Sliding Centre ahead of the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026, in Cortina on March 25, 2025. (Photo by Pierre Teyssot / AFP)
Cortina d'Ampezzo: Italian deputy premier Matteo Salvini said on Tuesday he would like to see Russian and Ukrainian athletes compete at the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics next year, if their countries have stopped fighting.
The leader of the far-right League party, a junior partner in Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's government who has responsibility for infrastructure, was speaking at the inauguration of the Winter Olympics bobsleigh track in Cortina d'Ampezzo.
"Given that there are peace talks (on the Ukraine war) going on at the moment, and that the Olympic spirit should be what brings people and athletes together, I hope... the Milan-Cortina Olympics 2026 will be the first Olympics which will see Ukrainian and Russian athletes take to the ski slopes," Salvini said.
"To see athletes from all over the world -- once the war is over -- run those 1,700 metres will mean that we have built a little piece of peace and that will be the most important thing."
Russia and its ally Belarus have been banned from holding international sporting competitions since Moscow's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, while their flags, anthems and officials are banned from most world events.
Only 15 Russian athletes took part in the Paris Olympics last year, under strict conditions -- they competed under a neutral flag and had to prove they had no ties to the military or security services.
A similar solution could be found for the Milan-Cortina Games, which take place in northern Italy on February 6-22 next year.
Salvini has in the past expressed admiration for Russian President Vladimir Putin, although he has distanced himself from this stance since the Ukraine war began.
While Meloni has been a vocal supporter of Kyiv, Salvini has worked to curb Italy's military aid, although he has not blocked it.
Earlier this month, he called French President Emmanuel Macron "crazy" for proposing to send troops to ensure any peace deal in Ukraine was observed.
He stressed Tuesday that "Europe should be a protagonist of peace".