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  • The Olympic passport

    Straits Times, Singapore
    Aug 24 2008


    The Olympic passport

    The number of foreign-born athletes competing in the Games has raised
    eyebrows. But in a borderless world, why shouldn't sports be just as
    globalised?


    By Tan Dawn Wei, expat eye


    This year's Olympic table tennis matches will be remembered as much
    for some formidable play as a battle amojng the Chinese.

    That's the Chinese-Singaporean, Chinese-French, Chinese-Austrian,
    Chinese-American, Chinese-Spaniard, Chinese-Australian, Chinese-
    German, Chinese-Polish, Chinese Canadian, Chinese-Korean, Chinese-Hong
    Konger, Chinese-Luxembourger, Chinese-Dutch, Chinese- Dominican,
    Chinese-Croatian and Chinese-Congolese.

    The oft-bandied phrase, 'the Chinese are everywhere', is nothing if
    not glaringly apparent at the Beijing table tennis games.

    Of the 78 women paddlers at this year's Olympics, 35 are China-
    born. Only three wear China's red and yellow colours.

    Past Olympic Games have borne witness to such ironic scenes before,
    but quite possibly none more than in the Chinese capital.

    And it's not just at the ping-pong table.

    When the members of the press descended on Chaoyang Park for what they
    thought would be a politically charged beach volleyball match between
    Georgia and Russia after the latter sent tanks into the former's
    territory, they saw none of that from the Brazilian players
    representing Georgia.

    Then, there were the New Zealand-born triathlete brothers who competed
    against each other: one, Shane Reed, doing it for his home country,
    the other, Matt, for the United States.

    Armenian wrestler Ara Abrahamian won a bronze medal for Sweden (which
    he was later stripped of for throwing it on the mat); Jamaican
    Germaine Mason gave Great Britain a silver and its first high-jump
    medal since 1996; and Moroccan Rashid Ramzi ran to a gold in the
    1,500m race for Bahrain.

    Of course, the table tennis trio of Li Jiawei, Wang Yuegu and Feng
    Tianwei - former Chinese, now Singaporeans - broke this country's dry
    Olympic medal spell of 48 years with a team silver.

    The United States also fielded a brigade of migrants - 36 from 28
    countries - this year: among them, Lopez Lomong, the Sudanese-born
    American flag-bearer at the opening ceremony, plus a South
    African-born tennis player, a Georgian archer, a Polish kayaker,
    Chinese table tennis players and a world champion Kenyan distance
    runner.

    All this trading of nationalities has led to much criticism and
    derision from purists, stakeholders and even the International Olympic
    Committee (IOC).

    It is one thing to find a new home as a conventional migrant, but
    another to be bought over purely for your athletic talents.

    No one raised a stink when Nastia Liukin, a Russian immigrant, won a
    gold medal in individual all-round gymnastics for the US a week ago.

    She had moved to New Orleans when she was 2 1/2 years old with her
    family after the Soviet Union broke up and is as American as apple
    pie.

    But Americans have been far less kind to two other of its basketball
    players who crossed over from the US to Russia.

    Becky Hammon and J.R. Holden have had to defend themselves repeatedly
    from being labelled 'traitors' when they donned Russian colours at
    this year's Games.

    Hammon, who wasn't drafted into the US national team, had said: 'I
    still love my country - it doesn't really have anything to do with
    that. I just want to play basketball.'

    The Olympics, it seems, are no longer about patriotism, national
    identity or making your motherland proud.

    Instead, it has become what The Atlanta Journal-Constitution writer
    Jeff Schultz calls 'an exercise in passport free agency'.

    Fingers have been wagging in the direction of rich Middle Eastern
    countries, which have thrown wads of cash at poor African athletes in
    a bid for national glory.

    Former world steeplechase champion Stephen Cherono, who traded his
    Kenyan jersey for a Qatari one and adopted a new name, Saif Saaeed
    Shaheen, for a lifetime salary of US$1,000 (S$1,400) a month, is just
    one of them.

    There have been enough cases of Cheronos to make the IOC take action:
    It ruled in 2002 that athletes must wait three years from receiving
    their new citizenship papers before they can compete for their
    adoptive country - unless their home country waives this deadline.

    IOC president Jacques Rogge said the committee introduced the rule to
    prevent athletes from 'changing nationality for purely financial
    reasons'.

    'It is a worrying situation emerging in sport,' he had remarked.

    Likewise, the International Table Tennis Federation has also put its
    foot down. After the Olympics, those over the age of 21 will be banned
    from pledging allegiance to another country.

    Those between 18 and 20 will have to wait seven years before they can
    make the jump.

    Other sports federations are also likely to follow suit.

    But there is something to be said about this globalisation of sports.

    When the world is increasingly becoming a borderless one, why should
    the field of sports be any different? When people have traditionally
    migrated in search of a better life, more equitable opportunities and
    greater challenges, why can't sportsmen do the same?

    Lawyer and economist Ian Ayres argued for flexibility in a New York
    Times column last Thursday, citing Article 6 in the Olympic Charter
    which states that the Games are competitions between athletes and not
    countries.

    'Imagine a world where the best athletes are able to compete. This is
    definitely not the current Olympic system. The country quota system
    keeps many of the best athletes home,' he wrote.

    'Letting athletes choose their national teams is a simple way of
    fulfilling this powerful idea,' he said of the Olympic Charter.

    If not for Singapore's Foreign Sports Talent (FST) scheme, introduced
    in 1993 to fast-track promising foreign athletes to Singapore
    citizenship, the Republic's three new Olympic silver medallists would
    quite likely never have had the opportunity to take part in any Games.

    The debate over Singapore's reliance on these imported athletes has
    been going on for the past decade, and the sports fraternity has
    reiterated the importance of these achievers to the development of
    sports here.

    Much cynicism still hangs in the air - at coffee shops and on online
    forums - that Singapore didn't really win at the Olympics since all
    three paddlers were China-born.

    Nowhere else, it seems, do you witness such disenchantment simply
    because the athletes bringing home the medals aren't native.

    Perhaps it is because the table tennis win is Singapore's only one at
    these Games. Elsewhere, there could be less scrutiny when foreign-born
    and native athletes both come home with an assortment of medals.

    But unlike Hammon, Holden and many others who hold two passports,
    Singapore's lack of a dual citizenship policy means foreign-born
    athletes have to give up one for another.

    And surely that will qualify them as Singaporeans in more ways than
    one. Chinese-Singaporeans.

    http://www.straitstimes.com /Breaking%2BNews/Sport/Story/STIStory_271428.html
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