German sports commemorates the victims of the terrorist attacks during the Olympic Games in Munich 1972

German sports commemorates the victims of the terrorist attacks during the Olympic Games in Munich 1972

On Sunday (19 November) – this year’s national day of rememberance – German sports commemorates the victims of the terrorist attacks during the Olympic Games Munich 1972. The German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) and its member organizations with a membership of over 27 million people payed their deepest respect to: David Berger, Anton Fliegerbauer, Ze’ev Friedman, Yossef Gutfreund, Eliezer Halfin, Yossef Romano, Amitzur Shapira, Kehat Shorr, Mark Slavin, Andre Spitzer, Yakov Springer and Moshe Weinberg.

Recent Posts

Building bridges: German sport meets EU priorities

This week the EOC EU Office hosted the 35th Gemeinschaftstagung Internationales, bringing to Brussels a dynamic delegation from Germany’s Landessportbünde, Landessportjugenden, the DOSB and the dsj. Over two productive days, delegates swapped insights on their European and global project pipelines, compared strategies for international engagement and took a deep dive into the fast-evolving EU sport-policy […]

Read More
EU Budget 2028-2034: time to widely spread our demands to policymakers!

The EOC EU Office is coordinating an advocacy initiative to ensure that organised sport is represented in the EU’s next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2028–2034. Backed by 48 National Olympic Committees, the IOC, the European Paralympic Committee, ASOIF, and most of its partner international and European federations, the joint position paper outlining our recommendations was […]

Read More
Monthly Report Highlight - Explanatory Guide to the Microplastics Regulation: Updates for the Sport Sector

On 31 March 2025, the European Commission published an Explanatory Guide complementing the 2023 Regulation on synthetic polymer microparticles (SPM), amending Annex XVII of the REACH Regulation, widely known as the “Microplastics Regulation”.  As a reminder, the 2023 Regulation directly impacted the sport sector by introducing a ban on the placing on the market of […]

Read More

Related Posts

May 23, 2025
Building bridges: German sport meets EU priorities

This week the EOC EU Office hosted the 35th Gemeinschaftstagung Internationales, bringing to Brussels a dynamic delegation from Germany’s Landessportbünde, Landessportjugenden, the DOSB and the dsj. Over two productive days, delegates swapped insights on their European and global project pipelines, compared strategies for international engagement and took a deep dive into the fast-evolving EU sport-policy […]

May 23, 2025
EU Budget 2028-2034: time to widely spread our demands to policymakers!

The EOC EU Office is coordinating an advocacy initiative to ensure that organised sport is represented in the EU’s next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2028–2034. Backed by 48 National Olympic Committees, the IOC, the European Paralympic Committee, ASOIF, and most of its partner international and European federations, the joint position paper outlining our recommendations was […]

May 19, 2025
Monthly Report Highlight - Explanatory Guide to the Microplastics Regulation: Updates for the Sport Sector

On 31 March 2025, the European Commission published an Explanatory Guide complementing the 2023 Regulation on synthetic polymer microparticles (SPM), amending Annex XVII of the REACH Regulation, widely known as the “Microplastics Regulation”.  As a reminder, the 2023 Regulation directly impacted the sport sector by introducing a ban on the placing on the market of […]

About us

The EOC EU Office is the House of European Sport, representing the European Olympic Committees (EOC), the IOC and other major sport organisations to the European institutions in Brussels.
CONTACT
crossmenu linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram