Kipchoge announced as World Athletics U20 refugee team mentor
14th December 2023
The legendary athlete will hold the role through to next year’s World Athletics U20 Championships Lima 24.
- Kipchoge will motivate the team members by sharing his knowledge and discipline in the sport.
- The former world record-holder will also share life skills as part of the role.
- Kipchoge will begin the role in January 2024 and hold it through to the World Athletics U20 Championships to be held in Lima in August.
Kenya’s two-time Olympic marathon champion Eliud Kipchoge will
mentor the U20 World Athletics Athlete Refugee Team (ART), using his great
experience in the sport to educate and inspire upcoming athletes.
Kipchoge will motivate the team members by sharing his
knowledge and discipline in the sport, while also encouraging them to pursue
their education and read books, which is one of his own passions.
Committed to helping the underprivileged, the former world record-holder will also share life skills as part of the role, which he will hold through to next year’s World Athletics U20 Championships Lima 24.
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Confirmation of Kipchoge’s mentorship, which will begin in
January, coincides with the announcement of the Multistakeholder Pledge on
Sport for Inclusion and Protection of Refugees, a commitment signed by more
than 100 organizations represented at the Global Refugee Forum 2023, which gets
under way today (13) in Geneva.
As one of the signatories, and as part of the Sport for
Refugee Coalition which it joined earlier this year, World Athletics reaffirmed
its commitment to use sport to help improve the lives of stateless people
around the world.
Held every four years, the Global Refugee Forum is the world’s largest international gathering on refugees.
It is designed to support the practical implementation of the objectives set out in the Global Compact on Refugees: ease pressures on host countries, enhance refugee self-reliance, increase access to third-country solutions and improve conditions in countries of origin.
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World Athletics’ pledge outlines the role that sport can
play in improving the lives of refugees, including through sport programming,
policy change, skill development, and communication and advocacy efforts.
The World Athletics Athlete Refugee Team, composed of
athletes who have fled violence, conflict and injustice at home, was founded in
2016 and has since evolved into the world's only year-round full-time refugee
team programme.
The team made its first competitive appearance as part of
the Refugee Olympic Team at the 2016 Olympic Games and has competed at nearly
every World Athletics Series event since.
The U20 team was formed as a pilot in 2022, with the
objective of presenting a well-prepared U20 ART for the World Athletics U20
Championships Lima 24.
Kenya’s 2007 world 800m champion Janeth Jepkosgei is head coach of the U20 ART, which is partly based at Kakuma Refugee Camp, located around 100km from the South Sudan border in east Africa, and Kapsabet, Kenya.
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Swiss educator Barbara Moser-Mercer leads the programme,
supported by coach Arcade Arakaza, himself a refugee from Burundi, and now
Kipchoge.
Earlier this month, World Athletics was part of a delegation
including the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Olympic
Refugee Foundation (ORF), National Olympic Committee of Kenya (NOCK) and
African Higher Education in Emergencies Network (AHEEN) that visited the Kakuma
and Kalobeyei refugee camps in Kenya. World Athletics was invited to be part of
the delegation by the ORF, recognizing the work that World Athletics is doing
in this domain.
Global Refugee Forum pledge: Sport for Inclusion and
Protection of Refugees
“In its capacity as world governing body of athletics, World
Athletics pledges to mobilize its sphere of influence to support the inclusion
of refugee athletes in athletics events around the globe.
We commit to providing them safe sport, promoting gender parity in our selection, educating them on safeguarding and offering academic and sport scholarships. Through our sponsor, Asics, they will benefit from our value in kind kit provision and will be eligible like any other athlete to win prize money.
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“Together with our stakeholders, we will pursue and advocate
for more World Athletics certified refugee coaches and support staff. We will
offer media training courses for refugee athletes. In collaboration with the
Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), we will be diligent on the wellbeing of refugee
athletes under our programme and advocate running clean in the spirit of fair
play.
“During our World Athletics Series (WAS) events, refugee
athletes will be treated like their fellow elite athletes, and we will maximise
their presence by offering them ambassadorial opportunities to promote the
sport and share its impact on their lives. All expenses to our World Athletics
Series events will be covered by World Athletics.
“World Athletics will serve as the team’s member federation, and the team will compete under the Athlete Refugee Team flag.”
Reporting by World Athletics