Russian President Vladimir Putin has given Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin until July 1 to organise the World Friendship Games next year ©Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin has officially proposed to his Government that they organise the "World Friendship Games" shortly after the Paris 2024 Olympics.

The Games would be an inaugural BRICS Games, involving the association comprised of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Putin gave Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin until July 1 to make suitable arrangements, according to the Kremlin.

The proposal may be dealt with at the BRICS Summit to be held in Johannesburg in August, which the Russian leader could attend.

In early May Putin accused officials of international sports organisations to "harm the international Olympic Movement", adding that sport should serve as a bridge between peoples and countries "especially when there are conflicts."

The initiative has come from the Russian Minister of Sports, Oleg Matytsin, who in March also proposed hosting the first Games of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), which includes countries such as China, India, Pakistan and the Central Asian Republics.

"Our joint mission is to do everything possible so that athletes and major international competitions are not the object of political games," Matytsin said.

Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin is a key figure in organising the proposed BRICS Games next year ©Getty Images
Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin is a key figure in organising the proposed BRICS Games next year ©Getty Images  

"This is only possible under conditions of equal rights and respect among all participants."

In March the International Olympic Committee, which has yet to rule definitively on whether Russian or Belarusian athletes will be able to compete at Paris 2024 under any circumstances, said that teams and athletes who support the war or belong to clubs linked to the armed forces or security forces would not be eligible to take part.

According to Matytsin, in these circumstances, even if Russian athletes are allowed to compete as "neutral" individuals the "maximum number of participants from the Russian side will be about 180 athletes."

After the discussions in early May, the Kremlin's official website quoted Matytsin as saying: "We propose to intensify the practice of holding competitions in an open format with the invitation of partner countries.

"We continue to fulfil your [Putin's] instruction to organise the World Friendship Games in the fall of 2024.

"We consider it necessary to use the resources of both Russian and international public and state organisations to the maximum for the successful holding of the Games, which should be held on a regular basis in the future."

Among those linked with organising the event are Alexey Sorokin, the former chief executive of the Organising Committee for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, staged in Russia. 

A multi-sport event known as the Friendship Games was organised in the Soviet Union and eight of its allies in 1984 in what was widely viewed as an alternative to the Los Angeles 1984 Olympics because of a Moscow-led boycott.

This followed an American-led boycott of Moscow 1980.