By Karolos Grohmann
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, March 13 | Tue Mar 13, 2012 10:21am EDT
(Reuters) - Syria will be present at the London Olympics despite ongoing violence in the country, with the International Olympic Committee backing a small group of athletes who could qualify for the Games, the IOC said on Tuesday.
A year-long uprising against President Bashar al-Assad has already claimed some 8,000 lives in the country as fighting between Syrian forces and rebels increasingly resembles a full-blown civil war.
"We continue dealing with the athletes and we will try to make sure that Syrian athletes will be in London," said Pere Miro, IOC Director of National Olympic Committees (NOC) relations and Olympic Solidarity.
"We have been dealing in the past with the Syrian NOC to ensure that the money goes to the athletes. Now we are using more direct ways," Miro told a small group of reporters.
All of the athletes who can win a spot for the London Games were currently training in Syria and had not left the country, Miro said.
He said he expected four or five athletes to qualify for London, mainly in athletics and swimming and as things stood at the moment they would march into the stadium under the Syrian flag.
"We are expecting this figure for athletes and then maybe another four or five officials (from Syria)," said Miro, adding among those automatically invited was the head of the country's Olympic Committee, General Mowaffak Joumaa.
"At the moment we treat the Syrian NOC as all the others but, sure, we keep our eye on the situation," he said.
Miro said while Syria would be represented at the Games, the new nation of South Sudan was unlikely to be there given it had yet to have a single sports federation recognised internationally and it needed a mimimum of five recognised federations.
Sudan's south became independent last July after a referendum agreed under a 2005 peace deal with its former civil war foe.
"South Sudan has been recognised by the United Nations but at this moment they have zero (federations recognised).
"At this moment we are very far from five so it will be very difficult to be in London," Miro said. (Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Justin Palmer)
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters recommends: Donate to Wikileaks.
No comments:
Post a Comment