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Search resuls for: "Refugee Olympic"


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I was able to meet new people, learn about myself a lot and travel around the world,” Ngamba added. The Refugee Olympic TeamThe Refugee Olympic Team gives forcibly displaced athletes an opportunity to participate on the highest sporting stage. The Refugee Olympic Team travel down the River Seine during the opening ceremony. Global refugee crisisNgamba’s bronze medal marks a significant moment for the Refugee Olympic Team and serves as an inspiration for millions of displaced people worldwide. The first ever medal for the Refugee Olympic Team symbolizes not only the resilience of Ngamba, but of all refugees striving for a better future.
Persons: Cindy Winner Djankeu Ngamba, Ngamba, ” Ngamba, Amanda Davies, I’ve, ” Yusra, , Markus Gilliar, GES Sportfoto, ” Mardini, , GB’s Lewis Richardson, Jack, “ Lewis, Lewis Richardson, Luke Hales Organizations: CNN, Refugee Olympic, Boxing, , Great Britain, The, Team, UNHCR Goodwill, Netflix, Olympic Team, Refugee Olympic Team, United Nations, Refugees, UNHCR, Olympics, Refugee Locations: Paris, Cameroon, United Kingdom, Great, , Southport, England
CNN —Refugee athlete Manizha Talash was disqualified from the B-Girl breaking competition at the Olympics for wearing a cape with the words “Free Afghan Women” during her breaking battle on Friday. The 21-year-old, who fled Afghanistan after the Taliban began seizing control in 2021, now lives in Spain and represents the Refugee Team at the games as B-girl Talash. As she made her debut during the pre-qualifier battle, Talash revealed a baby blue cape under her jumper emblazoned with the words calling for Afghan women’s emancipation. Results have been updated accordingly.”“I didn’t leave Afghanistan because I’m afraid of the Taliban or because I can’t live in Afghanistan,” Talash said before action got underway. The breaker became one of 37 athletes representing the Refugee Olympic Team in Paris, and is proud to do so.
Persons: Manizha Talash, , Talash, , ” Talash, Nadira Organizations: CNN —, DanceSport Federation, United Nations, UN, Refugee Olympic, Slate Locations: Afghanistan, Spain, Paris, New York
VILLEPINTE, France — Boxer Cindy Ngamba made history on Sunday by becoming the first athlete competing as a refugee to clinch an Olympic medal. The 25-year-old originally from Cameroon offered hope for the Refugee Olympic Team that was created to call attention to the plight of refugees across the world. She will face Atheyna Bylon, who ensured that Panama would get its fourth-ever Olympic medal with her own win shortly after Ngamba’s fight. “It means the world to me to be the first ever refugee to win a medal,” Ngamba told reporters. The Refugee Olympic Team has nearly quadrupled in size since its debut.
Persons: Boxer Cindy Ngamba, Davina Michel, Ngamba, Atheyna Bylon, Ngamba’s, ” Ngamba, , it’s, , Tammara, Michel, swipes, ” U.N, Filippo Grandi, Grandi, Lin Yu, Imane, she’s, Organizations: Refugee Olympic Team, Paris Games, Olympic, North Paris, AP, IOC Locations: VILLEPINTE, France, Cameroon, Panama, Rio de Janeiro, United Kingdom, Canada, North, Paris, Taiwan, Algeria
CNN —The Olympic Games is bound up with questions of nationality, with crowds waving a kaleidoscopic collage of different flags and national anthems playing for every gold medal winner. Except it was the Refugee Olympic Team crest that Ngamba held up as she celebrated the historic achievement of becoming their first ever medal-winning athlete after winning her women’s middleweight quarterfinal and guaranteeing herself a place on the podium. Ngamba was born in Cameroon and moved to the UK aged 11, where she now trains, but represents the Refugee Olympic Team, which has allowed refugee athletes to compete at the Games since 2016. Peter Cziborra/Reuters“I’m so grateful,” Ngamba told Eurosport after her fight. “I’m over the moon, I had my refugee team, the crowd, France and Paris team, and everyone in my family to come and support me.
Persons: Cindy Ngamba, France’s Davina Michel, Ngamba, Michel, Peter Cziborra, Reuters “, ” Ngamba, , , they’ve Organizations: CNN, Refugee, Refugee Olympic, Games, Reuters, Eurosport, Paris, Team, Olympic Team, Olympics Locations: Cameroon, France, London
Now as a 30-year-old, he will compete in the 10,000-meter race, representing the International Olympic Committee’s refugee team for the second time in his career. It’s not for you.’ He couldn’t be here.”Abdelmaji left for a high-altitude training camp in Ethiopia for several weeks last fall before returning to Tel Aviv. "You represent the refugees around the world.”Jamal Abdelmaji, right, trains for Paris 2024 at a Tel Aviv running track. Stopped by Israeli soldiers, he spent the first days in a refugee camp before he was sent to Tel Aviv. Really, really looking forward to it.
Persons: Jamal Abdelmaji, Mohammed, Abdelmaji, , , ” Abdelmaji, Hili Avinoam, It’s, it’s, ” Jamal Abdelmaji, Carlo Angerer, Rotem Genossar, ” Genossar, Avinoam, ” Avinoam, Asaf Roz, Roz, who's, “ We’ve, he’s Organizations: Olympic, IOC, Rio Games, NBC News, Paris, NBC, Alley, Olympic Games Locations: TEL AVIV, Israel, Darfur, Sudan, Israeli, Ethiopia, Tel Aviv, Gaza, Paris, Tokyo, Omdurman, Sudan’s, Khartoum, Canada, Cairo
When the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan in 2021, one of its first actions was to bar women and girls from participating in sports publicly. Female athletes in Afghanistan today face similar threats from the Taliban, including physical abuse and raids on their homes. The most recent example is the International Olympic Committee’s decision to allow a team representing Afghanistan in the Paris Games. It should let the athletes — most of whom live in exile — compete on the Refugee Olympic Team, which would send a message of hope to refugees around the world. But none of the three women representing Afghanistan — in athletics and cycling — live and train in the country, nor could they visit without risking their lives.
Persons: Organizations: Taliban, Paris, Refugee Olympic, Afghan Locations: Afghanistan
Total: 6