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Non-national Flags for Olympic Athletes

Last modified: 2003-02-22 by juan manuel gabino villascán
Keywords: olympic games | cis | georgia | tajikistan | football | east timor | south africa | yugoslavia | north korea | south korea |
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[The Olympic flag]
by Mark Sensen
Flag adopted: 1914.

Athletes take part under the flags of their delegations, which in most cases are their national flags. However, there have been other cases, some of which are mentioned below.


See:

See also:

Other site:


Commonwealth of Independent States, Barcelona 1992

At the 1992 Olympic Games of Barcelona, the Commonwealth of Independent States took part as one team, under the Olympic flag. At the Opening Ceremony, though, the "Unified Team" (as it was called officially) paraded behind all the flags of the states of its members. For Tajikistan this still was its "Soviet" flag! Since this team was really the team entered by the NOC of the former Soviet Union, it also included Georgia, even though at the time Georgia was not a member of CIS.

At another sports event in the same year, the European Football Championships, the CIS took part under a different flag. In this case a white flag with in black letters C.I.S. was used.


South Africa, Barcelona 1992

[Interim Olympic flag for South Africa] by Pascal Gross, 1999
Flag adopted 1992.

The 1992 Olympic Games included South African athletes for the first time since the start of the Apartheid Boycot. South Africa fielded "a non-racial team, under a non-racial flag". For this reason the team did not compete under the "old" national flag, but instead under an "Interim Olympic Flag for South Africa". This was designed for the NOC of South Africa by a Johannesburg marketing consultancy. The "flashes" of colours represented rain and sea (blue), land (red) and agriculture (green). The original design of the flag had the text "SOUTH AFRICA" written in grey below the emblem, but in the final version the text had been removed.

Though this flag was neutral to the international community, being part of the change coming over South Africa it was somewhat controversial to the South African people themselves. Some of them didn't see the need for a neutral flag, others regretted that the prominent South African sports emblem, the springbok, had not been incorporated.
{2, 3}


North & South Korea, Sydney 2000

[Flag for Unified Korean Sports Teams] by Mark Sensen, 15 september 2000

After nearly a decennium, North and South Korea are once again at speaking terms. They are committed to the re-unification of Korea, and as a demonstration of this commitment they intend to field joint Korean teams at international sports events. At Sydney 2000 the Koreas still participated as two separate teams, but at the Opening Ceremony they marched into the stadium as a single team, behind one flag held by two athletes. This is a flag used to represent all of Korea: A white flag, with in blue a map of the entire Korean peninsula.

The same flag was used in 1991, shortly before the last freeze in the Korean relations, when joint Korean teams participated in the World Table Tennis Championships in Chiba, Japan and the World Youth Soccer Championship in Lisbon, Portugal. {1, 5}


Teams and athletes under the Olympic flag

[The Olympic flag]
by Mark Sensen
Flag adopted: 1914.

Sometimes, when athletes or teams don't have a national flag, or have a reason not to compete under it, or not to parade behind it, the Olympic flag has been used as an alternative:


Soviet Union in Afghanistan (Moscow 1980)

At Moscow 1980, some of the countries protesting the Soviet Union's involvement in Afghanistan refused to take part at all, some refused to take part in the Opening Ceremony, and some did take part but, instead of marching behind their national flags, they marched behind Olympic flags.
{4}


Independent Olympic Athletes; Yugoslavia (Barcelona 1992)

While in their home countries fighting was too grim too allow for an Olympic truce, the athletes from countries that once had been part of Yugoslavia took part for the first time under their own flag. Though the remaining part of Yugoslavia was not represented at Barcelona 1992, some individual athletes from Yugoslavia participated as Independent Olympic Athletes. They did not march in the parade of flags, but in award ceremonies for them the Olympic flag was hoisted.
{6}


Independent Olympic Athletes; East Timor (Sydney 2000)

Four athletes from East Timor participated at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. But at the moment there is no internationally recognized independent country of East Timor, nor an East Timor NOC. Therefore, the IOC allowed them to compete under the Olympic flag.
{1}


Sources:

1 International Olympic Committee Website, July 2000
2 Bruce Berry, 21 July 2000
3 Flagmaster 84 [flm], Autumn 1996
4 Olympic Games - Britannica.com, 2000
5 Juan Manuel Gabino, 12 September 2000
6 De Olympiske Lege gennem 100 år 1896 - 1996, 1996