Refugee Athletes with No Nation Allowed to Participate in Rio Olympics 2016
Posted on the 27 October 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
The Olympic Games
need no introduction… the game held once in four years attracts thousands of
athletes. There are the Summer and
Winter Olympics – the 22nd Winter Olympics, was held in Sochi, Russia. In 2016, will be the Summer Olympics.
Russian star pole
vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva said that she plans to retire after the Olympic Games
in Rio de Janeiro, where she has her sights sets on a third Olympic gold.
"If everything goes as planned, I will be in a new role next year,"
Isinbayeva told journalists at a meeting of the world's Olympic associations in
Moscow. "I won't say in which role for the time being." The 33-year-old Olympian had announced her
retirement after winning the 2013 IAAF world championships in Moscow to give
birth to her daughter. But the three-time Olympic medallist later announced she
would come out of retirement if she had a chance at winning gold in Rio.
The 2016 Summer
Olympics officially - Games of the XXXI Olympiad, are the
thirty-first Summer Olympic Games, the world's largest international
multi-sport event that is held every four years. It will be held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The selection of the host was announced at
the 121st IOC Session held in
Copenhagen, Denmark, in 2009. Rio will
become the first South American city to host the Summer Olympics, the second
city in Latin America to host the event after Mexico City in 1968, and the
first since 2000 to be held in the Southern Hemisphere.
The games will take
place in August 2016 and more than
10,500 athletes from 206 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) will take part in
this sporting event. The games will feature 28 sports — including rugby sevens
and golf, which were added by the International Olympic Committee in 2009. These sporting events will take place across
33 venues spread across 4 regions of the city namely – Barra, Copacabana,
Deodoro, and Maracanã.
The latest sports
update is that top refugee athletes with no home country to represent will be
allowed to compete at the 2016 Rio Games, the International Olympic Committee
president, Thomas Bach, said on Monday at the United Nations General Assembly. A resolution, which was supported by 180 out
of the 193 UN member states, calls for the Olympic Truce to be respected from
seven days before the start of the 5-21 August Olympic Games until seven days
after the 7-18 September Paralympic Games.
“The Olympic Games
are the time when the values of tolerance, solidarity and peace are brought to
life,” Bach said. “This is the time when the international community comes
together for peaceful competition. “In the Olympic Village we see tolerance and
solidarity in their purest form. Athletes from all 206 National Olympic
Committees live together in harmony and without any kind of discrimination. “At
present none of these athletes would have the chance to participate in the
Olympic Games even if qualified from the sports point of view because, with
their refugee status, they are left without a home country and National Olympic
Committee to represent.
“Having no national
team to belong to, having no flag to march behind, having no national anthem to
be played, these refugee athletes will be welcomed to the Olympic Games with
the Olympic flag and with the Olympic anthem. “They will have a home together
with all the other 11,000 athletes from 206 National Olympic Committees in the
Olympic Village.”
As one could
recall, around 10,700 athletes from 205 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) took
part in the London Olympics. Three
athletes from the Netherlands Antilles Olympic Committee, which the IOC
Executive Committee had ceased to recognize at the IOC session of July 2011,
and one athlete from South Sudan, which has no recognized NOC, participated
independently under the Olympic flag.
Sadly at Sochi
Winter Olympics, Hamara Bharat had the
ignominy of three of its athletes marching without the national flag during the opening
ceremony. With the Indian Olympic Association (IOA)
suspended by the International Olympic Committee(IOC) due to ethical and
administrative reasons, the 3 athletes
participating from India walked behind the IOC flag, as we hung our heads in
shame. The IOA was suspended by the IOC
in December, 2012 due to its failure to comply with the Olympic charter and
that resulted in Indian athletes, including boxers, participating in events
under the flag of world body.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
27th Oct
2015.