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African athletes who disappeared from the Commonwealth Games turn up in Sydney and want to stay

AFRICAN athletes who disappeared from the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games instead of returning home have turned up in Sydney seeking legal advice on how to stay in Australia.

Eight Commonwealth Games athletes go missing, face visa cancellations

AFRICAN athletes who disappeared from the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games instead of returning home have turned up in Sydney seeking legal advice on how to stay in Australia.

Up to 19 athletes who went on the run in the closing week of the Games last month have until their visas expire at midnight Tuesday to leave Australia or face detention or deportation.

Eleven are believed to be from Cameroon, while others hail from Uganda, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Rwanda.

The Daily Telegraph can reveal some have approached Randwick’s Refugee Advice and Casework Service (RACS) for help with visas.

Eleven members of the Cameroon team — pictured marching into Carrara Stadium for the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth Games — are believed to be among the 19 who failed to return home.
Eleven members of the Cameroon team — pictured marching into Carrara Stadium for the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth Games — are believed to be among the 19 who failed to return home.

RACS solicitor Ben Lumsdaine confirmed “some have been to us for advice”. Although he refused to comment on individual cases, he doubted one month since the Games was long enough for the Department of Immigration and Border Protection to process critical protection visas.

“That’s unlikely, it can take quite a long time, it depends how quickly the department respond to each claim,” Mr Lumsdaine said. “The process can take many months, sometimes it takes years. We just hope there’s a fair legal process. We don’t have any vested interest in the outcomes.”

Ray Turner of Turner Coulson Immigration Lawyers said the missing athletes could be eligible for bridging visas, allowing them to avoid detention while their protection visas were being processed. But they needed to apply before tonight’s deadline. “If they’ve been getting decent advice they would have lodged it by now,” Mr Turner said.

He said the athletes “seem to be starting behind the Eight ball” in terms of arguing they face “legitimate persecution” if they returned home.

“If they’re representing their country one might assume they’re among the elite in their country,” he said, adding “every individual has an individual case”.

Mr Turner said Australia’s best immigration lawyers were in Sydney, which may have lured the athletes south.

“That’s probably out there on the grapevine somewhere.”

Immigration and Border Protection Minister Peter Dutton’s office would not confirm how many of the athletes were still believed to be in the country yesterday, or how many were at a known location.

During the Games, Rwandan weightlifting coach Jean Paul Nsengiyumva went missing after excusing himself for a toilet break mid-tournament. He, like others who disappeared from the athletes village, did not waste time packing a bag. Cameroon athletes left the village in groups of two or three.

At Melbourne’s 2006 Commonwealth Games a total of 45 overseas athletes and officials overstayed their visas or applied to get protective visas.

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/african-athletes-who-disappeared-from-the-commonwealth-games-turn-up-in-sydney-and-want-to-stay/news-story/a3e1f68a54254fa961b8f99653ada854