IOC headquarters in Lausanne. GETTY IMAGES

Reporters from the sanctioned country currently at war with Ukraine were stripped of their Paris 2024 credential, the Games organisers confirmed on Monday after the TASS state news agency first reported the withdrawal.

The opening ceremony on Friday was met with some blowback from a few religious groups and even countries like Russia, who have ramped up an already strained relationship with the International Olympic Committee. Even before the Games, complaints from the Russian Foreign Ministry addressed the fact that local journalists who had applied for accreditation did not get it.

TASS said on Sunday that the removal of the reporters and photographers' accreditation, essential to cover the Games, was "completely unexpected" after the journalists had entered France, received passes and attended the opening and several events.

"I can confirm that some accredited journalists have received an a posteriori decision from the competent authorities to withdraw their accreditation," 2024 Paris Olympics spokeswoman Anne Descamps told reporters. "As the Paris-2024 Organising Committee, we are applying the decision without being involved in the rationale behind this information, which has not been communicated to us," she added.



Descamps said she did not know how many journalists had been affected. Contacted by AFP, the interior ministry said it had no comment while TASS said the Paris Olympics organising committee had stripped four of its journalists of accreditation. 

One of the journalists, Artyom Kuznetsov, has covered a series of Olympic Games and was seen at the main Trocadero stands together with other journalists accredited to cover the opening ceremony.

Team Russia was banned from the Paris edition over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, now in its third year. Just 15 Russian athletes have been accredited to compete at the Olympics as neutrals. They did not take part in the opening ceremony.

Russia gave the opening ceremony a critical reception, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova describing it as a "massive failure". Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev said the opening ceremony was a "disgusting spectacle" and a "freak show".

TASS wrote the opening "was notable for a number of awkward situations", noting gaffes such as the Olympic flag raised upside-down and viewers leaving early due to pouring rain.

Earlier, some Russian journalists had accreditation requests denied, prompting Zakharova to tell TASS that "observing the rights of journalists and providing freedom of speech are just empty sounds for (President Emmanuel) Macron and his gang".