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10:43am Friday 25th July 2008
The Iraq Olympic Committee has described the decision by the International Olympic Committee to suspend the participation of their athletes in the Beijing Games as a "black day in the history of sports in Iraq".
The IOC confirmed in an official letter on Thursday that Iraq will be banned from competing just as seven Iraqi athletes were preparing to travel to China later this month.
"Despite the best efforts of the International Olympic Committee, it seems very unlikely that any Iraqi athlete will compete at the Beijing Olympic Games," read the IOC statement.
"The IOC would like to see Iraq's athletes in Beijing, and is disappointed they have been so ill-served by their own government's actions.
"The deadline for taking up places for Beijing for all sports except athletics has now passed and as a result we must now reallocate a number of Iraq's qualified or invited quota places."
General secretary of the Iraqi Olympic Committee Hussain Al Amidi expressed his disappointment with the decision, conceding it will have further repercussions on the development of sport in Iraq.
"It's a black day in the history of sports in Iraq," he said. "The decision to ban Iraqi athletes will affect the aims of Iraq in the current development process.
"The interference of the Iraqi government in sports was against the International laws and we have confirmed this before."
Iraq National Olympic Committee deputy president Bashar Mostafa, meanwhile, felt the decision will only serve to punish those Iraqi athletes that will miss out.
"The decision is very harsh and the only losers from all of this will be the Iraqi athletes who were banned from taking part in the Olympic Games," he said. "The decision was taken just because the Iraqi Government received misinformation about the executive board of the Olympic Committee and decided to intervene."
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The Dalai Lama will address MPs as his high-profile visit to the UK turns to the thorny issue of human rights in China.
US President George Bush is to visit Britain next month during a tour of European nations, the White House has announced.
The Government has defended plans for a new breed of school diplomas amid concerns that fewer teenagers than expected are choosing the courses.
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