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The attention of the world will soon be drawn to how Russia enforces its peculiar rules and regulations over the course of the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics – and it seems new ones are coming to light every day.
Canadian snowboarder Sebastien Toutant has recently arrived in Russia ahead of the games, and while looking around the accommodation stumbled across a bizarre chart showing what he said were the "Sochi rules in the bathrooms".
While the list of dos and don’ts includes some reasonable tips in aid of promoting good hygiene - not standing up, being sick or squatting above the toilet being used - you might be forgiven for thinking the chart's designers had ran out of ideas when they got to the last two rules.
In one, a stick man can clearly be seen fishing, with a rod, in the toilet. The reasoning behind this remains unclear - with fishing not included as a sport at the winter games, athletes are unlikely to have brought equipment along with them.
It seems equally unlikely that the architects of the $51 billion (£300 billion) games would have cut costs by building toilets over frozen fishing lakes.
While it is a little more understandable, the sign instructing athletes not to do drugs in the toilets also seems a little gratuitous, given the games’ strict anti-doping policies and structures.
This is not the first picture to be tweeted of the toilets at games which has garnered international attention, with questions raised last month as to the practical use of a twin toilet in the Sochi Biathlon Centre .
Though it remains to be seen how officials will enforce a ban on fishing in the loos, of greater interest internationally will be whether the authorities take action based on Russia’s new laws against so-called "gay propaganda".
President Vladimir Putin has insisted gay people from around the world can "feel relaxed and comfortable" coming to Sochi this month – but with the alarming caveat of " as long as they leave the children in peace ".
The 2014 games are expected to be the most expensive Winter Olympics ever, taking place from 7 to 23 February.
A to Z of the Winter OlympicsShow all 26 1 /26A to Z of the Winter Olympics A to Z of the Winter Olympics A is for Alpine Or rather non-Alpine. If/when (delete as to your levels of optimism/pessimism) Team GB medals fail to arrive keep your ears open for British officials opining how tough it is being a “non-Alpine” nation. Scores highly in Winter Olympics bingo.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics B is for Bjoerndalen Winter Olympics spotters badge to anyone familiar with Ole Einar. The 40-year-old Norwegian biathlete is aiming for a record-equalling 12th Winter Olympic medal.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics C is for Cool Runnings It rather ruins the legend to point out that Jamaica have a bobsleigh team in the Games for the sixth time. The originals came in 1988 and had their story turned into a successful film.
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A to Z of the Winter Olympics D is for Death These are dangerous Games. The Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili (pictured) was killed on the eve of the 2010 Games, while in 1964 the Australian teenage skier Ross Milne and the British luger Kazimierz Kay-Skrzypecki were killed in practice runs. In 1992, the Swiss skier Nicolas Bochatay died after colliding with a snow machine.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics E is for Eddie the Eagle Now 50, Edwards pops up every four years to relive Calgary 1988. His fame is international; just last week he was interviewed by the New York Times. He remains, said the paper, "a synonym for fun-loving underdogs".
A to Z of the Winter Olympics F is for Flowers In 2002, the 19th Games, Vonetta Flowers, a sprinter from Alabama turned bobsleigher, became the first black athlete to win Winter Olympic gold.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics G is for Ganga Jean-Claude Ganga of the Congo summed up the corruption that engulfed the Salt Lake City bid. Known as the "human vacuum cleaner" for his willingness to hoover up anything going, Ganga was expelled from the IOC having allegedly accepted bribes of $300,000.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics H is for Harding Harding's husband Jeff Gillooly arranged the "hit" on her great rival Nancy Kerrigan but the man hired to put her out of action and clear Harding's path to gold in 1994 botched his attack. Both made Lillehammer, Kerrigan won silver, Harding came eighth and was later banned for life. She became a boxer.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics I is for Innsbruck The only two-time hosts. In 1976, the Games were awarded to Denver but the city's citizens voted not to allow public funds to be spent on them. They were hurriedly moved to Austria.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics J is for Jacobellis So there you are, moments from Olympic glory on your snowboard - time to show off with one more little trick... Lindsey Jacobellis fell over in Turin in 2006 to squander a three-second lead.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics K is for Klammer The Austrian won a solitary gold medal but it was the manner in which he skied to downhill glory in 1976 that puts Franz Klammer among the greats. He flew downhill in Innsbruck, teetering on the edge of disaster to win by 0.33sec.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics L is for Lord Lucan It was over a breakfast in St Moritz that Robin Dixon was persuaded by his cousin, one Lord Lucan, to give the sport of bobsleigh a go. Fifty years ago, in 1964, Dixon and Tony Nash won Britain’s last gold in the event.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics M is for Miracle on Ice Lake Placid, 1980, the scriptwriters dream: a young US ice hockey team triumphs over the Soviet Union, overwhelming favourites for gold. In the key game against the Soviets the US goalie, Jim Craig, made 39 saves as the underdogs won 4-3. Disney turned it into a film.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics N is for Norway's curlers' dress sense Perhaps the hours of winter darkness leave them craving a bit of colour but in the cold light of day, the Norwegians have come up with some shockers. For Sochi they will be sporting a do-not-adjust-your-sets zigzag pattern.
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A to Z of the Winter Olympics O is for Oldest skier in town Prince Hubertus of Hohenlohe-Langenburg was the oldest competitor in Vancouver four years ago. Now, aged 55, he's back, slaloming for Mexico, the country of his birth.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics P is for Piste parties “If you’ve ever tried to ski when you’re wasted, it’s not easy,” said Bode Miller, now the most decorated US skier, ahead of the 2006 Games. He partied his way through them and failed to win a medal.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics Q is for Quad The quadruple jump is the trick without which no male skater can win gold, the toughest challenge in the sport. In 2010, the Russian Evgeni Plushenko brilliantly nailed it. His US rival Evan Lysacek didn’t attempt it but still won gold. Dark tales of corruption gripped the Russian media.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics R is for Rebagliati The Canadian won the first snowboard gold in 1998 and promptly tested positive for marijuana. He was stripped of his medal but had it returned when it was realised dope was a “restricted” rather than “prohibited” substance and the restriction didn’t apply to snowboarding. Clear?
A to Z of the Winter Olympics S is for Snow Or no snow. The Russians have been stockpiling the stuff for two years just in case.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics T is for Torvill and Dean Britain's moment of perfection in the 1984 Games: it remains the most-watched sporting moment in British history with 24m viewers.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics U is for USA The only country to have won gold at every Winters. Britain is one of a dozen to have taken part in every Games, unfortunately that's not what counts.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics V is for Voyevoda The Russian already has two Olympic bobsleigh medals but plans to return to his true sporting love after the Games – he’s a professional arm wrestler.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics W is for Walt Disney The ceremonies for the 1960 Games, held in Squaw Valley, California were overseen by Disney, chairman of the Pageantry Committee.
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A to Z of the Winter Olympics X is for X Games Freestyle skiers and snowboarders are divided on whether this is the main event or the Olympics, with its desperation to appeal to a younger audience.
A to Z of the Winter Olympics Y is for Youngest In 1932 Britain's Cecilia Colledge was 11 when she took to the ice. Four years later she won figure skating silver at the grand old age of 15.
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A to Z of the Winter Olympics Z is for Zimbabwe Luke Steyn becomes the first Zimbabwean to compete in the Winter Games, although he has been based in Europe and the US since the age of nine.
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