Shooting for glory, not to kill - a refugee's Olympic goal
Send a link to a friend
[May 27, 2021]
By Cecile Mantovani
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) - When
Eritrean refugee Luna Solomon lifts her rifle at a Lausanne shooting
range, she is aiming at a specific target: a spot at the Tokyo
Olympics in July.
Back in her home country, which has one of the worst human rights
records in the world and has endured lengthy wars, the presence of a
rifle would have meant life-threatening danger.
"In my country, if you're shooting, it's to kill someone," Solomon
told Reuters during a break in training for her event, the 10m air
rifle.
"We don't use rifles for sport."
Solomon, 27, fled Eritrea and arrived in Switzerland in 2015. She
took up the sport after meeting Niccolo Campriani, an Italian
Olympic gold medallist and former world champion, who is now her
coach.
She is one of a few dozen refugee athletes who are Olympic hopefuls,
supported by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to form a
team to participate in this summer's Games.
The IOC unveiled its first refugee team at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro
Olympics in an effort to raise awareness of asylum issues. That
year, more than a million refugees entered Europe after fleeing wars
in the Middle East, Africa and central Asia.
The 10 members, from Syria, Congo, Ethiopia and South Sudan,
competed in athletics, swimming and judo.
The sight of the refugees taking part in the traditional athletes'
parade was one of the most moving moments of the opening ceremony,
and their progress at the Games became a global feel-good story.
This year, some 55 refugee athletes from 13 countries,
including Solomon, have been identified in a pre-selection for the Tokyo
Games, with the final squad to be announced in June.
[to top of second column] |
Habtom Amaniel of Eritrea and Refugee
Olympic Team hopeful for the track 10000m at the Olympics Games in
Tokyo poses before a training session in Montreux, Switzerland, May
25, 2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Eritrean runner Habtom Amaniel, 31, is
also on the shortlist, hoping to compete in the 10 km event. In the
safety of his training facility in Switzerland, he feels liberated
to be ambitious.
"Here in Switzerland, I had chances I did not have in my country,"
said Amaniel, who undertook a dangerous journey through Sudan and
Libya before making it to Italy and eventually Switzerland.
"Here I can do whatever I want, and how I want. No one is telling me
'you cannot do that, you have to do that'."
His coach, Cyrille Gindre, attributes Amaniel's focus and dedication
to the hardships he has endured.
"He left without money, he had nothing, he had to cross the desert,
he had no water. (He had to work out) how to cross the sea," Gindre
said.
"I think this is why he has so much willpower. Like a lot of people
who lived in those places, everything looks brighter and this is
what we see in his journey."
(Additional reporting by Denis Balibouse, writing by Karolos
Grohmann, editing by Estelle Shirbon)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|