IOC Renews Refugee Olympic Team for Tokyo 2020 Games

  0 Braden Keith | October 10th, 2018 | International Volleyball, News, Tokyo 2020 Olympics

The IOC has announced a renewal of its refugee team for the 2020 Olympic Games: a program that was approved by the membership this week at the IOC Session in Buenos Aires.

The idea was first launched in 2015, where the IOC formed the first refugee team of athletes that had been exiled from countries stricken by war, famine, or other uninhabitable conditions. The first team included 10 athletes hailing from Ethiopia, South Sudan, Syria, and the Democratic Republic of Congo; and was made up of 2 swimmers, 2 judokas, a marathon runner, and 5 middle-distance runners.

“The IOC Session has once again endorsed this initiative,” said IOC president Thomas Bach. “In an ideal world, we would not need to have a Refugee Team at the Olympic Games. But, unfortunately, the reasons why we first created a Refugee Olympic Team before the Olympic Games Rio 2016 continue to persist. We will do our utmost to welcome refugee athletes and give them a home and a flag in the Olympic Village in Tokyo with all the Olympic athletes from 206 National Olympic Committees. This is the continuation of an exciting, human and Olympic journey, and a reminder to refugees that they are not forgotten.”

The IOC has not yet announced the process for selecting the 2020 team, but in 2016 they first identified 43 potential candidates with the help of National Olympic Committees, which were tasked with identifying refugee athletes within their borders who might be of Olympic standard. The IOC considered both the candidates’ sporting ability, and their personal circumstances. To be considered, the athletes needed United Nations-verified refugee status.

The IOC created a $2 million fund to support the athletes. Half of the 5-member team were chosen from among 23 nominated by former marathon World Record holder Tegla Leroupe, who ran a support program at Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya.

Each of the 4 home countries represented on the Refugee Olympic Team also sent their own delegations, with the Refugee Olympic Team marching separately at the Opening and Closing Ceremonies while carrying the Olympic flag.

Besides providing continued support for those athletes since the 2016 Olympics in partnership with the United Nations Human Rights Council, the IOC has expanded its refugee programs, including in 2017 launching the Olympic Refuge Foundation. The IOC says that program will “support more broadly the protection and empowerment of vulnerable displaced people through sport and through the creation of safe spaces.”

There was no refugee team at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.

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About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of VolleyMob.com. Braden's first foray into sports journalism came in 2010, when he launched a swimming website called The Swimmers' Circle. Two years later, he joined SwimSwam.com as a co-founder. Long huge fans of volleyball, when Braden and the SwimSwam partners sought an opportunity to …

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