IOC Chief to Attend UN Refugees Summit

(ATR) Thomas Bach continues his quest to highlight the contribution refugees can make in sport on a trip to New York.

Compartir
Compartir articulo

(ATR) Thomas Bach continues his quest to highlight the contribution refugees can make in sport on a trip to New York next week.

Around the Rings is told that the IOC chief travels to the U.S. on Sunday. He will attend the Summit for Refugees and Migrants at UN headquarters on Monday. He’ll also attend some of the 71st Session of the UN General Assembly.

Bach will meet UN general secretary Ban Ki-Moon, with discussions likely to include how the IOC can build on the success of the Refugee Olympic Team at the Rio Games. Plans may soon be put in place to have a refugee team compete at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics.

The IOC president will be accompanied by Syrian and South Sudanese refugees, and Refugee Olympic Team athletes Yusra Mardini and Yiech Pur Biel. They were among the 10 refugee athletes who participated at the Rio Olympics.

Swimmer Mardini from Syria competed for Germany. Pur Biel from South Sudan represented Kenya in the 800m.

While in New York, Bach will hold meetings with heads of state. No further details were disclosed by the IOC. He’s also scheduled to attend a HeforShe special event, part of a solidarity campaign for gender equality initiated by UN Women.

The IOC confirmed the Refugee Olympic Team in the summer. Olympic Solidarity covered travel and other participation expenses for the athletes and team officials. Bach promised to continue to support them after the Games.

Last year, the IOC created a special fund of $2 million to help refugees amid the worldwide migrant crisis. More than 15 NOCs made use of this fund and helped identify refugee athletes with the potential to qualify for the Olympics.

Reported by Mark Bisson

20 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics is AroundTheRings.com, for subscribers only.

Recents Articles

Security in Paris 2024: the “anti-terrorist perimeter” was extended for the opening ceremony

Three months after the parade on the Seine River and hours after the arrest of a 16-year-old teenager, the Paris police established new security measures and stated: “The terrorist threat remains very high, even if there is no concrete threat.”

La seguridad en París 2024: se extendió el “perímetro antiterrorista” para la ceremonia inaugural

A tres meses del desfile en el río Sena y horas después de la detención un adolescente de 16 años, la policía de Paris estableció nuevas medidas se seguridad y afirmó: “La amenaza terrorista se mantiene muy elevada, aunque no haya amenaza concreta”.

Doping of Chinese swimmers: AMA invited an independent prosecutor to investigate their actions in the face of the accusations

In June 2021, the World Anti-Doping Agency was notified of 23 positive cases by TMZ. In China, they said that the samples were contaminated and after an investigation, the athletes were not sanctioned and some became Olympic champions in Tokyo. Now, several Federations demand explanations.

Doping de los nadadores chinos: AMA invitó a un fiscal independiente a investigar su accionar ante las acusaciones

En junio de 2021, la Agencia Mundial Antidopaje fue notificada sobre 23 casos positivos por TMZ. En China aseguraron que las muestras fueron contaminadas y tras una investigación, los atletas no fueron sancionados y algunos se consagraron campeones olímpicos en Tokio. Ahora, varias Federaciones exigen explicaciones.

Chipre logra un histórico título europeo en gimnasia artística masculina

Marios Georgiou venció al ucraniano Oleg Verniaiev, se consagró campeón all around en el Campeonato Europeo de gimnasia artística y se quedó con uno de las últimas plazas olímpicas de la disciplina para París 2024.