Two-man refugee team appreciates experience
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The IOC shows Syrian
refugee swimmer Ibrahim Al Hussein after competing in a men’s
50-meter freestyle S9 swimming heat at Olympic Aquatics Stadium
during the Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. |
Of the nearly 4,000 athletes competing in the Rio Paralympics, all
but two are doing so for their country.
Syrian swimmer Ibrahim Al Hussein and Iranian-born discus thrower
Shahrad Nasajpour make up the first refugee team at the Paralympics.
''All the years I dedicated to sports did not go in vain,'' said Al
Hussein, who lost part of his right leg in a bombing in his Syrian
hometown.
''I think we were trying to show that the values that the
(Paralympics) holds is to provide opportunities regardless of the
circumstances of individuals with impairments,'' said chef de mission
Tony Sainsbury, regarding the creation of the refugee team. ''Those
opportunities exist for them provided that they can demonstrate that
they are of the right standard of potential.''
Sainsbury said athletes must meet three criteria to be considered.
They need to be officially recognized as a refugee, who had sought and
was granted asylum. They needed to return from Brazil to the nations
where they sought asylum, and they had to prove a ''credible
performance,'' he said.
Mohamad Alabed, who lived in the same area as Al Hussein, fled Syria
and now resides in the Netherlands. He said while he doesn't know Al
Hussein personally, ''everyone knows of the heroic Syrian swimmer.''
While neither refugee competitor medaled, Al Hussein hopes to leave
behind a different type of legacy at the Paralympic Games. He says he
feels ''having represented the refugees of the world and having the word
'refugee' circulated throughout the world is the most important thing I
could have done.''
- msn |