
The Refugee Olympic Team will be returning to the games, held this summer in Tokyo, Japan, between 23 July–8 August 2021.
This is the second time the refugee team will be competing. The first time was at the Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 2016. The team has almost tripled in size since 2016, from 10 to 29 members, and comprises athletes from 11 countries living and training in 13 host countries. This is also the first year that there is a Refugee Paralympic Team.
Why is there a Refugee Olympic Team?
In 2015, 65 million people had been displaced from their homes as a result of conflict or natural disaster. In that year, more than one million refugees entered Europe after fleeing wars in the Middle East, Africa and Central Asia.
That summer, the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the guardian of the Olympic Games, established a Refugee Emergency Fund: £1.4 million was donated to help international aid agencies integrate refugees in sport. In the same year, the IOC announced it would be inviting refugee athletes to compete in the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.
The creation of the refugee team sent a message of hope and inclusion to millions of refugees around the world. The 10 athletes who competed in Rio de Janeiro came from Syria, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Ethiopia.
Following the success of the 2016 team, the IOC decided to enter an IOC refugee team in the 2020 Tokyo games (postponed one year due to COVID-19).
Who is competing on the Refugee Olympic Team? Where are they from?
The athletes are selected from refugees supported by the IOC through the Olympic Scholarships for Refugee Athletes programme.
The 29 athletes come from Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Eritrea, Venezuela, Iran, Afghanistan, and Cameroon. Many of these countries are in the midst of conflict or civil wars, making it too dangerous for the Olympians to return.
The team represents 12 sports including athletics, badminton, boxing, canoeing, cycling, judo, karate, taekwondo, sport of shooting, swimming, weightlifting, and wrestling.
Meet the athletes
Cyrille Tchatchet II - weightlifting
Cyrille Tchatche II is the only U.K.-based refugee athlete on the team. He will be competing in weightlifting. As well as an Olympian, he's a qualified nurse who worked for the NHS throughout the pandemic. "I will be honoured to represent not only refugees but all the estimated 80 million displaced people around the world," he told Middlesex University.
Cyrille first came to the U.K. to compete at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow but after realising it was not safe to return to Cameroon, he fled the team camp. Sleeping rough in Brighton with no way to support himself, Cyrille’s mental health suffered. He used the last of his phone credit to call the Samaritans - a charity that provides emotional support to anyone in emotional distress. He thinks the Samaritans contacted the police, as a squad car then appeared to pick him up. While in police custody, his asylum case began. Once he was rehoused in Birmingham, Cyrille started Weightlifting again at his local club. It wasn't long before he was competing in British regional championships, later winning British Champions at 94kg and 96kg.
Refugee @Olympics Weightlifter @Iicyrille has been working as a nurse for the @NHS throughout the pandemic alongside his training for #Tokyo2020!
— International Rescue Committee - UK (@RESCUE_UK) July 20, 2021
Join us in cheering on the #Refugee Olympic Team this year. Good luck Cyrille! https://t.co/xcQMXpQpdM
Yusra Mardini - swimming
The year before she competed in the Rio Games, winning her heat in the 100m butterfly, Syrian swimmer Yusra Mardini had to swim for her own life. She and her sister swam for three hours, pushing their foundering boat--which carried other refugees trying to reach Europe--to the safety of a Greek beach. This summer she’ll be competing in the Olympics for the second time with the Refugee Olympic Team.
Now 22 and living in Germany, Yusra is ready for Tokyo 2020. "My dream is for the world to be at peace and there will be no more refugees anymore,” she told Eurosport. “That those wars will end and that we are all equal in the world and live peacefully and in harmony. I know it's hard but this is my dream."
Anjelina Nadai Lohalith - track
South Sudanese track runner Anjelina Nadai Lohalith competed in the 1,500m event at Rio 2016, representing the first ever Refugee Olympic Team.
Escaping conflict in South Sudan with her aunt at just 8 years old, Anjelina resettled in Kenya’s Kakuma refugee camp, one of the largest refugee settlements in the world. She hasn't seen her parents, who are still in Sudan, since she fled. The hope of reuniting with her family motivates her to succeed. "If I go far and [have] success, then my dream is just to help my parents."
Hamoon Derafshipour - karate
Karate star Hamoon Derafshipour won bronze in the 2018 World Championships while representing his homeland Iran. But a year later he and his wife Samira Malekipour left for Canada so that Samira, the former coach of Iran’s women’s karate team, could train him ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Games.
"I wanted my wife to be my coach, which was not possible back home due to the existing rules," Hamoon told The Record.com (subscription required). Hamoon says Samira is the key to his success, and they have big goals for the Tokyo games. "We want to go to the Olympics for results, for a medal."

The Tokyo 2020 Refugee Olympic Team
Abdullah Sediqi, from Afghanistan, now living in Belgium – Taekwondo
Ahmad Alikaj, from Syria, now living in Germany – Judo
Ahmad Badreddin Wais, from Syria, now living in Switzerland – Cycling
Aker Al Obaidi, from Iraq, now living in Austria – Wrestling
Alaa Maso, from Syria, now living in Germany – Swimming
Anjelina Nadai Lohalith, from South Sudan, now living in Kenya – Athletics
Aram Mahmoud, from Syria, now living in the Netherlands – Badminton
Cyrille Fagat Tchatchet II, from Cameroon, now living in the UK – Weightlifting
Dina Pouryounes Langeroudi, from Iran, now living in the Netherlands – Taekwondo
Dorian Keletela, from Congo, now living in Portugal – Athletics
Eldric Samuel Sella Rodriguez, from Venezuela, now living in Trinidad and Tobago – Boxing
Hamoon Derafshipour, from Iran, now living in Canada – Karate
Jamal Abdelmaji Eisa Mohammed, from Sudan, now living in Israel – Athletics
James Chiengjiek Nyang, from South Sudan, now living in Kenya – Athletics
Javad Mahjoub, from Iran, now living in Canada – Judo
Kimia Alizadeh Zenozi, from Iran, now living in Germany – Taekwondo
Luna Solomon, from Eritrea, now living in Switzerland – Shooting
Masomah Ali Zada, from Afghanistan, now living in France – Cycling
Muna Dahouk, from Syria, now living in the Netherlands – Judo
Nigara Shaheen, from Afghanistan, now living in Russia – Judo
Paulo Amotun Lokoro, from South Sudan, now living in Kenya – Athletics
Popole Misenga, from the Democratic Republic of Congo, now living in Brazil – Judo
Rose Nathike Likonyen, from South Sudan, now living in Kenya – Athletics
Saeid Fazloula, from Iran, now living in Germany – Canoe
Sanda Aldass, from Syria, now living in the Netherlands – Judo
Tachlowini Gabriyesos, from Eritrea, now living in Israel – Athletics
Wael Shueb, from Syria, living in Germany – Karate
Wessam Salamana, from Syria, living in Germany – Boxing
Yusra Mardini, from Syria, living in Germany – Swimming
You can read about all the athletes in detail here.
Why is the Refugee Olympic Team important?
With over 82 million displaced people worldwide, we are living in the worst refugee crisis since the Second World War. The Refugee Olympic Team sends a powerful message of solidarity and hope. The team showcases the incredible talent of already extraordinary people who have been through so much.
Join us as we cheer on the refugee team at the Olympics this year.