Refugee Olympic Team

Sporting event delegation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Refugee Olympic Team is a group made up of independent Olympic participants who are refugees. In March 2016, International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach announced the creation of the Refugee Olympic Athletes Team, as a symbol of hope for all refugees in the world in order to raise global awareness of the scale of the migrant crisis in Europe. In September 2017, the IOC established the Olympic Refuge Foundation to support refugees over the long term.[1][2]

Medals
Ranked 151st
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
1
Total
1
Quick facts Refugee Olympic Team at the Olympics, IOC code ...
Refugee Olympic Team at the
Olympics
Athletes compete under the Olympic flag.
IOC codeEOR
Medals
Ranked 151st
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
1
Total
1
Summer appearances
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The Olympic flag and the Olympic Hymn are used as team symbols. The participating athletes marched in the opening ceremony of the 2016 Summer Olympics, with the team entering the stadium as the penultimate delegation, just before the host country. At the 2020 and 2024 Summer Olympics, the team entered the stadium second after Greece.[3]

At the 2016 Summer Olympics, the team used the IOC country code ROT. At the 2020 Summer Olympics, it was changed to EOR (an abbreviation of the French Équipe olympique des réfugiés). As of 2026, no Refugee Olympic athletes had participated in the Winter Olympic Games, nor Youth Olympic Games (regardless of Summer or Winter).

The team was awarded the 2022 Princess of Asturias Award for Sport for giving athletes the opportunity in conflict zones and places where human rights are violated, preventing them from performing their sporting and personal activities.[4]

Cindy Ngamba, a refugee from Cameroon, became the first person to win an Olympic medal for the Refugee Olympic Team, winning a bronze medal in the women's 75kg boxing event at the 2024 Summer Olympics.[5] Kimia Alizadeh, who represented the Refugee Olympic Team at the 2020 Summer Olympics, won bronze at the 2022 European Taekwondo Championships while representing the Refugee Team, after previously winning bronze for Iran at the 2016 Summer Olympics, and before winning bronze for Bulgaria at the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Medal tables

Medals by Summer Games

More information Games, Athletes ...
Games Athletes Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank
Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro100000
Japan 2020 Tokyo290000
France 2024 Paris37001184
United States 2028 Los Angelesfuture event
Australia 2032 Brisbane
Total0011151
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Medals by sport

More information Sport, Gold ...
SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
 Boxing0011
Totals (1 entries)0011
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List of medalists

More information Medal, Name ...
Medal Name Games Sport Event
 BronzeCindy Ngamba2024 Paris BoxingWomen's middleweight
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Participations

This category was created in March 2016. The selection criteria include the sporting level, the official refugee status verified by the United Nations, the personal situation, and the background of each athlete.

2016 Summer Olympics

2020 Summer Olympics

At its meeting in Buenos Aires in October 2018, the International Olympic Committee decided to establish the Refugee Olympic Team (EOR) for the 2020 Summer Olympics. This decision built on the legacy of the Refugee Olympic Team in 2016 and was part of the IOC's commitment to play its part in addressing the global refugee crisis and in carrying the message of solidarity and hope to millions of refugee athletes around the world.

The IOC Session tasked Olympic Solidarity with establishing the conditions of participation and defining the team identification and selection process. These elements were carried out in close collaboration with the National Olympic Committees (NOCs), the International Sports Federations, the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, and the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). On 20 June 2019, the IOC released the list of Refugee Athlete Scholarship holders who wished to join the IOC Refugee Olympic Team, Tokyo 2020. This announcement was made on World Athlete Day, celebrated every year on 20 June.

The 56 Refugee Athlete Scholarship holders include the 10 athletes who were part of the first Refugee Olympic Team in 2016, new individual athletes, and a group of athletes preparing at the Tegla Loroupe Refugee Training Center in Kenya. All were assisted by Olympic Solidarity as part of its support program for refugee athletes. The IOC Refugee Olympic Team at the 2020 Tokyo Games consisted of 29 athletes—19 men and 10 women—hailing from 11 nations: Afghanistan, Cameroon, Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iraq, Iran, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Venezuela. These athletes competed across 12 sports: athletics, badminton, boxing, cycling, canoeing, judo, karate, shooting, swimming, taekwondo, weightlifting, and wrestling.[6]

Swimmer Yusra Mardini, who competed in the 2016 Rio Games as part of the first-ever Refugee Olympic Team, and marathon runner Tachlowini Gabriyesos were selected as flag bearers for the IOC Refugee Olympic Team at the 2020 Tokyo Games.[7]

2024 Summer Olympics

More information Athlete, Country of origin ...
Athlete Country of origin Host NOC Sport Event
Dorian Keletela Republic of the Congo France Athletics Men's 100 m
Musa Suliman Sudan  Switzerland Athletics Men's 800 m
Dominic Lokinyomo Lobalu South Sudan  Switzerland Athletics Men's 5000 m
Jamal Abdelmaji Eisa Mohammed Sudan Israel Athletics Men's 10,000 m
Tachlowini Gabriyesos Eritrea Israel Athletics Men's marathon
Mohammad Amin Alsalami Syria Germany Athletics Men's long jump
Perina Lokure Nakang South Sudan Kenya Athletics Women's 800 m
Farida Abaroge Ethiopia France Athletics Women's 1500 m
Dorsa Yavarivafa Iran Great Britain Badminton Women's singles
Omid Ahmadisafa Iran Germany Boxing Men's flyweight (51 kg)
Cindy Ngamba Cameroon Great Britain Boxing Women's middleweight (75 kg)
Manizha Talash Afghanistan Spain Breaking B-Girls
Amir Rezanejad Iran Germany Canoeing Men's slalom C-1
Fernando Jorge Cuba United States Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 1000 m
Saeid Fazloula Iran Germany Canoeing Men's sprint K-1 1000 m
Saman Soltani Iran Austria Canoeing Women's sprint K-1 500 m
Amir Ansari Afghanistan Great Britain Cycling Men's road time trial
Eyeru Tesfoam Gebru Ethiopia France Cycling Women's road race
Mohammad Rashnonezhad Iran Netherlands Judo Men's −60 kg, Mixed team
Arab Sibghatullah Afghanistan Germany Judo Men's −81 kg, Mixed team
Adnan Khankan Syria Germany Judo Men's −100 kg, Mixed team
Muna Dahouk Syria Netherlands Judo Women's −57 kg, Mixed team
Nigara Shaheen Afghanistan Canada Judo Women's −63 kg, Mixed team
Mahboubeh Barbari Zharfi Iran Germany Judo Women's +78 kg, Mixed team
Edilio Centeno Nieves Venezuela Mexico Shooting Men's 10 m air pistol
Luna Solomon Eritrea  Switzerland Shooting Women's 10 m air rifle
Alaa Maso Syria Germany Swimming Men's 50 m freestyle
Yusuf Marwan Yemen Egypt Swimming Men's 100 m butterfly
Matin Balsini Iran Great Britain Swimming Men's 200 m butterfly
Hadi Tiranvalipour Iran Italy Taekwondo Men's −58 kg
Yahya Al Ghotany Syria Jordan Taekwondo Men's −68 kg
Farzad Mansouri Afghanistan Great Britain Taekwondo Men's −80 kg
Kasra Mehdipournejad Iran Germany Taekwondo Men's +80 kg
Dina Pouryounes Iran Netherlands Taekwondo Women's −49 kg
Ramiro Mora Romero Cuba Great Britain Weightlifting Men's −102 kg
Yekta Jamali Iran Germany Weightlifting Women's −81 kg
Iman Mahdavi Iran Italy Wrestling Men's freestyle −74 kg
Jamal Valizadeh Iran France Wrestling Men's Greco-Roman −60 kg
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See also

References

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