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Artist behind the war dead helmet claims that Olympics from Ukraine 'look surreal.

Iryna Prots, a Ukrainian artist who created the banned helmet of skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych that depicts Ukraine's war-dead, feels detached from the?Games.

The 52-year old woman said in her apartment in Kyiv, "Honestly, I find the Olympics surreal." Because the Olympics have always been about peace... when the world was united.

Russian airstrikes have ravaged the Ukrainian capital’s electricity grid, causing its residents to be in darkness and cold for months. Russian forces are making slow progress in an attritional conflict that is now entering its fifth year along the 1,200 km frontline.

The Prots helmet, featuring portraits from two dozen Ukrainians killed in Russia's War, is at the heart of the standoff between Heraskevych & the International Olympic Committee. They pleaded to him on Wednesday not to wear it.

The IOC banned the helmet on February 2, citing that it violated the rules for political statements during the Games. This ruling sparked widespread anger among Ukrainians.

Heraskevych's friends were among the dead. He refused to comply and could be disqualified when the competition begins on Thursday. The 27-year-old finished fourth at the World Championships in 2017.

On Wednesday, when asked if the helmet was there or not, he replied: "Yes."

Artist: DESIGN SHOWS REALITY OF WAR

Prots claimed that Heraskevych had asked her, who she knew since he was young, to decorate his helmet. She called her design "a challenge", meant to confront the world with war's reality.

The Russian invasion has left behind tens and thousands of psychological scars and ravaged large areas of Ukraine. Kyiv is also under pressure by the Trump administration in Washington to quickly agree on a peace agreement.

Prots said, "The world doesn't want the truth to be known." They don't know why we didn't give in, why we weren't willing to surrender.

HERASKEVYCH SUPPORTED BY UKRAINIANS

Prots' birthday is on the '24th anniversary' of Moscow's invasion on February 24, and he describes each athlete on Heraskevych helmet as an asset lost for the war torn country.

She said: "Each pair... of eyes could be seeing the world right now, and they could be competing for their own medals or standing on their pedestals."

Moscow says that sport and international conflict should be kept separate.

Heraskevych has received a flood of support, including from President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Svitlana Shevchenko, 37 years old, is a Kyiv resident who described Heraskevych, as a symbol for how Ukrainians strive to achieve in spite of suffering.

We want to live and reach new heights. And we want the world to know it. (Additional reporting and writing by Yurii and Karolos, Alison Williams and Daniel Flynn.

(source: Reuters)