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IOC / Shaban Masengesho
Date
09 Jun 2016
Tags
IOC News , Development through sport , Rwanda

IOC and UNHCR join forces to better protect refugee adolescents and young adults in Rwanda


In Rwanda for a three-day humanitarian mission, International Olympic Committee (IOC) Honorary President and Special Envoy of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for Youth Refugees and Sport Jacques Rogge has pledged increased support for youth and sport projects in six refugee camps.   

After a day of meetings with the authorities, which coordinate the refugee response, in the capital and a visit to the Kigali Genocide Memorial site to pay tribute to the victims of the 1994 genocide, Rogge visited yesterday Mahama camp. There, he met many young refugees and their families and had the opportunity to watch a number of boys and girls take part in various sporting activities from weightlifting and karate demonstrations to basketball and volleyball games.

IOC / Shaban Masengesho


The Special Envoy was accompanied by the Minister of Disaster Management and Refugee Affairs, Seraphine Mukantabana; the Representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Saber Azam; the President of the Rwanda National Olympic and Sports Committee, Robert Bayigamba; and swimmer and Olympian Pamela Girimbabazi.

Sport has an incredible power and it can be so much more than a leisure activity. Jacques Rogge IOC Honorary President

The former IOC President took this opportunity to announce that the IOC and UNHCR are joining forces and launching a project to better protect refugee adolescents and young adults in Mahama and five other refugee camps (Gihembe, Kigeme, Kiziba, Mugombwa and Nyabiheke) in Rwanda, by offering them sports activities.

“Sport has an incredible power and it can be so much more than a leisure activity,” Rogge said. “In such instances, sport can act as a social tool. Empowering young people and strengthening communities, it can contribute to protecting refugee adolescents and young adults from abuse, exploitation, neglect and violence.”

IOC / Shaban Masengesho

With a financial contribution from the IOC of close to USD 400,000, the project, which will run for a period of three years starting from 2017, will aim to rehabilitate sports grounds; introduce sports activities; raise awareness of the benefits of sport among the camps’ young people, their parents and the wider communities; and train local young people as sports trainers to ensure its sustainability. It will aim to empower adolescents and young adults by enhancing their life skills and competences through structured sports activities as well as using sport to enhance positive interactions and ensure a peaceful coexistence between refugees and the host communities. This initiative is supported by the Rwanda National Olympic and Sports Committee, which will provide technical expertise on sports-related matters, as well as non-governmental organisations Plan International and Save the Children, which will act as implementing partners and provide expertise on child protection issues.

“Sports make an invaluable contribution, not only to the enjoyment and relief from the stress of life in refugee camps, but also to the protection and personal development of young refugees,” said UNHCR Representative Saber Azam. “I am grateful for this generous support from the IOC, which will enable UNHCR to scale up and enhance sports programmes, and improve child and adolescent protection for all refugee communities in Rwanda.”

The Minister of Disaster Management and Refugee Affairs, Seraphine Mukantabana, also took the floor to pledge the full support of the government, emphasising on the right every child and human being has to play and practice sport.

IOC / Shaban Masengesho

On 9 June, the Special Envoy will conclude his Rwandan mission with a visit to Gihembe camp, home to over 14,000 refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo, which will also benefit from the IOC’s support, as well as a visit to a school just outside the camp, where he will watch a volleyball game between teams of Rwandan students and refugee students.

For the last 20 years, the IOC and UNHCR have been using sport to support healing and development among young refugees in many camps and settlements around the world. Following the approval of Olympic Agenda 2020, the IOC’s strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement, and in light of the current global refugee crisis, the IOC has created a special fund of USD 2 million to develop relief projects through sport in collaboration with National Olympic Committees (NOCs) around the world.

With the help of NOCs and the UNHCR, the IOC has also identified a number of athletes living in forced displacement, and is helping them through its Olympic Solidarity programmes to take part in the Olympic Games Rio 2016. As announced by the IOC last Friday, 10 athletes will compete for the Refugee Olympic Team – the first of its kind – at the upcoming Games.

IOC / Shaban Masengesho

The IOC is confident that this initiative will bring hope to the refugee athletes who wish to return to training and compete at the Games. It is also intended as a symbol of hope for all refugees around the world, which will help raise awareness of the magnitude of the crisis.

Learn more about the Refugee Olympic Team here.

IOC / Shaban Masengesho
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