SportsSyrian Olympian Hasan Bayan seeks asylum in Germany

Syrian Olympian Hasan Bayan seeks asylum in Germany

Hasan Bayan did not return to Syria with the rest of the team after the Olympics. Local media report that the 22-year-old fled to Germany, seeking asylum.

a
a
Images source: © Instagram
Bartłomiej Nowak

14 August 2024 10:44

Pro-government media in Damascus reported that Syrian judo representative Hasan Bayan stayed in France after the Olympics. He then reportedly travelled to Germany, where he applied for asylum.

Firas Maalla, head of the Syrian Sports Federation Organization, said that after Bayan’s participation in the Olympics and at the end of his stay in the Olympic Village, he asked the mission supervisor for permission to stay with his uncle, who lives in France. Bayan was supposed to stay with his family until his visa, granted to him as an athlete, expired.

Regarding the athlete’s escape and his application for asylum in Germany, Maalla denied that the Syrian Sports Federation Organization knew any details about this. The official emphasized that Bayan lost his match to Austrian Samuel Gassner in the judo under 73 kilograms category and left the competition.

Syrian media launched a fierce attack on the athlete. The television station Al-Khabar prepared a long report depicting the athlete as a "failure." The 22-year-old was accused of opportunism and acting to the detriment of his homeland.

The report echoed the question, who initially allowed him to go to Paris? The television highlighted that Hasan Bayan did not qualify for the Olympics. Despite this, he received an invitation from the International Olympic Committee.

The organization that oversees the Olympic movement invited selected athletes from countries that did not have enough participants. Their athletes did not meet the Olympic minimum through direct qualification. Syria received four invitations for athletes who had not achieved sufficient results. Among these four was Bayan.

The Syrian delegation to the Olympics in Paris had 6 athletes who competed in swimming, equestrian, weightlifting, athletics, judo, and gymnastics. None of the representatives won a medal in Paris.

© Daily Wrap
·

Downloading, reproduction, storage, or any other use of content available on this website—regardless of its nature and form of expression (in particular, but not limited to verbal, verbal-musical, musical, audiovisual, audio, textual, graphic, and the data and information contained therein, databases and the data contained therein) and its form (e.g., literary, journalistic, scientific, cartographic, computer programs, visual arts, photographic)—requires prior and explicit consent from Wirtualna Polska Media Spółka Akcyjna, headquartered in Warsaw, the owner of this website, regardless of the method of exploration and the technique used (manual or automated, including the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence programs). The above restriction does not apply solely to facilitate their search by internet search engines and uses within contractual relations or permitted use as specified by applicable law.Detailed information regarding this notice can be found  here.