(Adds Van de Velde's teammate, Dutch team spokesperson,
Netherlands losing the match)
By Layli Foroudi
PARIS, July 28 (Reuters) - There were boos, and mixed
feelings amongst the crowd, as Netherlands beach volleyball
player Steven van de Velde, a convicted rapist, made his Paris
2024 debut for a game in bright sunshine at the feet of the
Eiffel tower on Sunday.
His team, however, were unapologetic about van de Velde
taking part in the Olympics, saying "the past is in the past"
and that the matter should not be brought up at the Games.
Van de Velde was sentenced to four years in prison in
Britain in 2016 following the rape of a 12-year-old girl two
years earlier when he was 19.
He spent 13 months in prison - one year in Britain and one
month in the Netherlands - before being freed there after what
he did was re-classified under Dutch law as a lesser offence of
"committing indecent acts" and his sentence was reduced.
Van de Velde has been competing in beach volleyball
again since 2017.
He was booed several times during Sunday's match, though
there was also applause from other members of the crowd.
Among the spectators, Melissa Gautier, a 23-year-old health
worker, said she thought van de Velde should not be there.
"Being an athlete shouldn't give you a free pass," she said.
Andrea Syslos, a 47-year-old lawyer from Italy, did not know
about the case, but when told about it said: "It's not a good
thing. Sporting justice should be harsher than civil justice.
"Maybe he shouldn't still be in prison but it's not normal
that he is playing in the Olympics where he should be an example
for other people," he said.
But van de Velde's teammate Matthew Immers brushed away the
criticism over the now 29-year-old taking part in the Olympics.
"What's in the past is in the past. He had his
punishment and now he is really kind. For me it is an example
that (he) grew and learnt a lot from it," Immers told reporters.
"I'm enjoying playing with him," he said.
John van Vliet, a press officer for the Netherlands
team, said: "It's something that shouldn't be brought up through
sports in a tournament that he qualified for.
"The general matter of sex convictions or sex-related
crime is a much bigger issue than sport but in his case we have
a person who has been convicted, who did his sentence and did
everything afterwards that he can do to compete again."
IOC SATISFIED
Amongst the crowd watching the match, some agreed.
"I read about this and I think everyone deserves a second
chance. He's (legally) allowed to be here and so he can be
here," 46-year-old German architect Alexandra Bertram said.
Van de Velde and Immers lost 22-20 19-21 15-13 to Italy's
Alex Ranghieri and Adrian Ignacio Carambula Raurich in their
men's Pool B match.
The International Olympic Committee said on Saturday it was
satisfied with explanations given by the Netherlands Olympic
team regarding the participation of van de Velde.
IOC spokesperson Mark Adams said the committee was not
totally comfortable with the situation but that "a crime
occurred 10 years ago, a great deal of rehabilitation has taken
place and strong safeguarding is in place."
The Netherlands team have taken steps to mitigate the impact
of van de Velde's participation by moving him to alternative
accommodation in Paris and not the athletes' village and asking
him not to speak to the media.
Alienor Laurent, co-president of French feminist collective
"Osez le feminisme!" (Dare to be Feminist), mobilised against
van de Velde's participation, was outraged that he was allowed
to compete in the Olympics.
"What is the message to victims? That sporting talent has
more value than their dignity," she told Reuters last week.
"And what is the message to aggressors? Assaulting (a young
girl) will have no impact on your life or your career, you will
be celebrated and may have medals."
The case has resonated more widely, including in Britain and
the United States, where some women's rights groups have
campaigned against van de Velde's participation in the Games.
"An athlete convicted of child sexual abuse, no matter
in what country, should not be awarded the opportunity to
compete in the Olympic Games," said Julie Ann Rivers-Cochran,
executive director of The Army of Survivors NGO.
(Writing by Ingrid Melander; additional reporting by Elizabeth
Pineau in Paris, Stephanie Van Den Berg in Amsterdam, David
Miliken in London; Editing by Ken Ferris)
((Layli.Foroudi@thomsonreuters.com;))