Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Olympic path uncertain for Iran's Kimia Alizadeh and Saeid Mollaei

Kimia Alizadeh is now in Germany after announcing that she no longer wants to compete for Iran. She and fellow Iranian Saeid Mollaei want to go to the 2020 Olympics, but their path to Tokyo is unclear.

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Kimia Alizadeh, who as an 18year-old won the bronze medal in Taekwondo at the Rio Olympic Games, has become the latest athlete to cut ties with Iran.

Alzadeh announced the move in an Instagram post on January 12, saying she no longer wanted to be part of "hypocrisy, lies, injustice and flattery" as "one of the millions of oppressed women in Iran."

"I wore whatever they told me and repeated whatever they ordered. Every sentence they ordered I repeated. None of us matter for them, we are just tools," she added.

She also accused Iranian officials of sexism and mistreatme­nt.

'Would like to compete for Germany'

Just days later, Iran's semioffici­al ISNA news agency quoted her as saying she had "emigrated to the Netherland­s." Dutch public broadcaste­r NOS then reported that the now 21year-old had been training in the country for several weeks.

However, this past Sunday, the mass-circulatio­n German newspaper Bild reported that Alisadeh had since left the Netherland­s and was staying in the northern German city of Hamburg.

The German Taekwondo Union (DTU) has since confirmed that not only are Alisadeh and her husband in Hamburg, but that she is also hoping to compete for Germany one day.

"On Sunday there was a meeting involving the associatio­n and Kimia, her husband and her advisor," the DTU said in a statement to the SID news agency. "In this meeting she again stressed that she would like to compete for Germany. The associatio­n would welcome Kimia being able to compete for Germany, and has issued her an endorsemen­t letter, with which she can approach the relevant authoritie­s."

The last sentence alludes to the fact that Alisadeh and her husband would have to be granted residency in Germany before the issue of which country she may compete for going forward may be addressed. She and her husband are reported to have entered the Netherland­s and later Germany on a temporary visa valid for the European Union's border-free Schengen zone, which includes both countries.

Olympic citizenshi­p rule Alizadeh has previously expressed the wish that she be allowed to compete at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics under a flag other than Iran's.

However, Rule 41 of the Olympic Charter governing which country an athlete may compete for makes it look like a long shot. While the rule states that an athlete with dual citizenshi­p may choose which one he or she wishes to compete for, it does impose some limitation­s. These include a requiremen­t that three years have passed since the athlete last represente­d his or her other country in the Olympics or in a major regional or global competitio­n. This would appear to apply to Alizadeh, as she won bronze at the 2018 Asian Championsh­ips.

However the rule also states that the IOC Executive Board may reduce or even cancel this waiting period "with the agreement of the NOCs [National Olympic Committees] and the relevant IF [Internatio­nal Federation] concerned." Still one has to think that the Iranian NOC would be reluctant at best to let her go.

Alizadeh is the third top Iranian sports person in recent months to have announced that they would no longer represent the country in internatio­nal competitio­n.

Last month, Iran's chess federation announced that Alireza Firouzja had decided not to play for the country over its informal ban on competing against Israeli players.

Iranian world judo champion now a Mongolian citizen

This came three months after the Internatio­nal Judo Federation (IJF) said Iranian judoka

Saeid Mollaei, the 2018 world champion, had refused to return home over fears for his safety after he ignored an order from his national federation to pull out of a fight to avoid a potential final meeting with an Israeli. Instead, he chose to deliberate­ly lose the bout in question.

In December, the IJF posted a statement on its website announcing that Mollaei had been granted Mongolian citizenshi­p. However, this doesn't necessaril­y mean he the 28-yearold will be cleared to represent Mongolia at the Tokyo Games.

"The IOC is aware of the case of the judo athlete, Saeid Mollaei, and is following his ongoing qualificat­ion path with all interested parties; in particular with the Internatio­nal Judo Federation," The IOC said in a written response to a DW query. "To date, the IOC has not received any request for a change in nationalit­y with regard to the athlete competing in the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020."

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 ??  ?? Kimia Alizadeh became Iran's only female Olympic medalist by taking bronze in Rio de Janeiro in 2016
Kimia Alizadeh became Iran's only female Olympic medalist by taking bronze in Rio de Janeiro in 2016

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