I have been reading many articles about Youngest swimmer - Gaurika Singh in Rio Olmypic '16. I am really proud of her representing Nepal with her talent. However I had an argument with one of my friend about her citizenship- Nepali or British? Can anyone please give me a solid answer so that I can defend myself She is Nepali. I hope that she is not repeating citizenship issue like Colonel Lama.
All the best!!
https://youtu.be/ZT1TQTuxmz0
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Posted on 08-04-16 3:23
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So her mother and father either of them are not foreign citizen right. Since you mentioned about their migration from Nepal to UK. So based on your last sentence, if someone was born in Nepal then they can represent Nepal without considering naturalized citizenship of foreign nation of their parents. Tonight I am going to give solid answer to my friend. Hope that he is not reading sajha thread discussion (or adding comments)
Posted on 08-06-16 10:27
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विदेशमा सिकेको सीप स्वदेशमा प्रयोग गर्नु पर्छ भनेको येही हो गाठे| आखिर विदेशमा जति नै मिहेनत गरे पनि नाम त स्वदेशले नै दिने रहेछ गाठे। like Shristi shrestha and few other.
When athletes march in the Olympic opening ceremonies Friday night in Rio de Janeiro, some of them will be donning the national uniforms of countries they’re not actually from.
For an event that represents so much national pride, where victories or defeats live in lore for decades, many athletes will represent another country, either because of heritage or because it may be the only way they could compete in the games.
But is switching nationalities just to compete in the games in the Olympic spirit?
Take pole vaulter Giovanni Lanaro. He was born, raised, educated, and trained in southern California, but in Rio he’ll be competing for Mexico. While he is an American, his mother was born in Mexico, and the Mexican national team only requires that you have Mexican heritage in order to compete for them.
“What's wrong with being proud about competing for Mexico?” he told the Los Angeles Times. “I don't see anything wrong with it.”
Lanaro isn’t the only American competing for Mexico in the Olympics. He joins a women’s basketball player, a wrestler, and five boxers.
The Olympics are where the world’s best athletes compete. Some teams, like the U.S., are full to the brim with top talent. Some of the best American athletes are inevitably left off the Team USA roster, even if they can compete on the world stage.
Lanaro is competing for another country because of his pride in his heritage. But he is also competing for a national team that could use his talent. The same can be said for runners David Torrence for Peru, Alexi Pappas for Greece, and Peter Callahan for Belgium, who are all Americans with ancestors born abroad. As Torrence put it to Runner’s World:
It boils down to why do I run? I love competing and racing and everything involved in that process, but I also really love to work with kids, inspire youth, and I think I am a part of a movement to get people running. In the U.S., there’s going to be a full team of people in every event in almost every sport. There’s no shortage of heroes or role models out there. But in Peru, they’re not sending full teams, they’re not sending a ton of athletes, not only in track and field, but across all sports.
And if an athlete has the talent, why be left out of the Olympics? Peter Spiro ofSlateargued before the 2014 Winter Olympics:
It makes more sense to allow free Olympic association, with athletes playing for any team that will have them. The Olympic Charter notes that “the Olympics are competitions between athletes in individual or team events and not between countries.” That’s exactly right. We don’t require our major-league ballplayers to hail from the cities they play for, so why should we demand anything different of our Olympic athletes?
Follow the story lines of past Olympics and you find they aren’t just about countries, like the U.S. hockey victory over the Soviet Union in 1980, but also about people, like Michael Phelps’s record 22 medals.
Callahan, the Belgian olympian, takes an almost socialistic attitude toward the Olympics, saying athletes should “rightfully be distributed around the world and make those championships even better, even more competitive, even more exciting.”
The Olympic Charter requires only that an athlete be a national of the country for which he or she is competing. If they want to compete for a different nation, it has to be three years after they last competed for their country of origin. Becoming a national is not difficult for a talented athlete.
But there is a dark side to trying to distribute talented athletes to other countries. As Foreign Policywrote in 2014, “opportunism knows no borders.” They write:
Qatar, meanwhile, invests heavily in athletes from both Kenya and Bulgaria. In 2000, Qatar’s government bought an entire Bulgarian weightlifting team — eight athletes in total — in exchange for citizenship and a little over $1 million. In 2003, it also reportedly bought two Kenyan long-distance runners: Stephen Cherono and Albert Chepkurui, who duly became Qatari Olympians Saif Saeed Shaheen and Ahmad Hassan Abdullah (neither Cherono nor Chepkurui were actually Muslim).
Azerbaijan, for its part, has heavily recruited foreign-born athletes; half of its 50-person national team in the 2012 Olympics were naturalized citizens. Great Britain’s Olympic team in 2012 had 60 foreign-born athletes, who were labeled“Plastic Brits” by The Telegraph.
The U.S. even takes place in the practice. During the 2008 games, the U.S. hurried citizenship status for a Polish kayaker, a Chinese table-tennis player, a triathlete from New Zealand, a Kenyan distance runner, and an Australian equestrian, among many others who qualify for EB-1 visas for people of “extraordinary” abilities. Importing athletes has worked for the U.S., producing eight medals between 1992 and 2004, according toThe New York Times.
While competing for a different country can raise an athlete’s international profile, it could lead to criticism, as well. When South Dakota native and WNBA star Becky Hammon decided to play basketball for Russia during the 2008 Olympics, The Houston Chronicleasked, “Is Hammon a traitor?”
U.S. women’s coach Anne Donovan even said, “If you play in this country, live in this country, and you grow up in the heartland and you put on a Russian uniform, you are not a patriotic person in my mind.” (The U.S. would beat Russia in the semifinals and eventually won gold. Russia won bronze.)
Jacques Rogge, the former International Olympic Committee president, had his own reservations about athletes changing nationalities. He said in 2012, “We cannot oppose it because it’s a sovereignty matter, but let me tell you very frankly: I don’t love that.”
In the first modern Olympic games in 1896 in Athens, athletes by and large were not grouped by nations. Hungarian athletes were the only ones who competed under a national banner. It was a competition among 280 athletes in 43 events. It was not a competition among nations, even if they came from 14 different nations.
In this Olympic games, 11,000 athletes will compete in 306 events under the banner of 206 nations. In the eyes of the athletes competing under the flag of a country that’s not home, they’re competing in the Olympic spirit as much as anyone else
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Posted on 08-06-16 10:33
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I don't think so she is a british citizen. She lives in britain but Nepal as of now does not support dual citizenship. So, we can safely assume she is a nepali citizen. UK ko passport bokeko thaa paaye ta nepal le nepal ko citizenship revoke garnu parne ho niyam kaanun anusar. tara nepal ma niyam kanun ko kura garnu ta sungur lai gu nakhaa bhane jastai ho.
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Posted on 08-07-16 7:48
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I think that none of the government share the information of its citizenship to other nation. So its totally on a person to renounce its citizenship informing formally to government of official. That's why there is a big issue on citizenship of Colonel Lama who is now facing legal issue from UK government as well Nepalese victim during insurgency.
ब्राजिलमा भइरहेको रियो ओलम्पिकमा नेपालको तर्फबाट सात जना खेलाडीले खेल्दैछन् । तर नेपाली मुलका समेत खेलाडी गन्ने हो भने ब्राजिलमा आठ जना खेलाडी खेल्दैछन् । भारतको तर्फबाट नेपालका जितु राईले दुई वटा प्रतिष्पर्धामा भिड्दैछन् । उनी संखुवासभामा जन्मेर अहिले भारतीय सेनामा कार्यरत छन् । उनको परिवार भने सुनसरीको इटहरीमा बस्छ ।
पेस्तोल सुटिङका गोल्ड मेडलिस्ट राईले यो ओलम्पिकमा दुई वटा प्रतिष्पर्धामा सहभागिता जनाएका छन् । दुई वटा प्रतिष्पर्धा मध्ये १० मिटर एअर पेस्तोलमा सफलता हाँसिल गर्न सकेनन् । उनले आठौं स्थान हाँसिल गरे । तर उनलाई पदक दिलाउन सक्ने अर्को प्रतिष्पर्धा बाँकी नै छ ।
राई ५० मिटर एअर पेस्तोल इभेन्टअन्तर्गत विश्व वरीयतामा दोस्रो नम्बरमा पर्छन् । १० मिटर पेस्तोलमा भने उनी तेस्रो नम्बरमा छन् । आफ्नो खेल जीवनको निकै छोटो अवधिमा यो उचाइ प्राप्त गरेका राईलाई यो ओलम्पिकमा पदक जित्ने प्रमुख दावेदारका रुपमा भारतले लिएको छ । उनले ५० मिटर पेस्तोलतर्फको प्रतिष्पर्धामा बुधबार भाग लिँदैछन् ।
२९ वर्षे राईले सुटिङको विश्वकप, कमनवेल्थ गेम र एसियाडमा गरेर दुई वटा स्वर्ण, तीन वटा रजत तथा एउटा काँस्य जितेका थिए । अघिल्लो एसियाडमा राईले गोल्ड मेडल जित्दा नेपालका खेलाडीले सम्पूर्ण प्रतिष्पर्धाबाट जम्मा एक काँस्यमा चित्त बुझाएका थिए ।
बुवाबाट प्रेरित जितु १० वर्षअघि भारतीय सेनाको ११ औं गोर्खा रेजिमेन्टमा भर्ती भएका थिए । राईले कक्षा १० सम्मको मात्र अध्ययन गरेका छन् । तर उनको सुटिङ खुबीलाई ध्यानमा राखेर सेनाका अधिकारीहरुले उनलाई खेलमा पठाए । छोटो समयमै दुर्लभ उपलब्धी हाँसिल गरेका उनले विभिन्न अन्तर्राष्ट्रिय प्रतिष्पर्धाबाट सन् २०१४ मा मात्रै भारतलाई सात पदक दिलाए ।
खेलमा पाएको उपलब्धीकै कारण उनी पछिल्लो दुई वर्षमा दुई पटक बढुवा भएका थिए । अहिले उनी सेनामा नायव सुबेदार पदमा छन् । उनलाई भारतीय सेनाले विभिन्न देशहरुमा अभ्यासको लागि पठाउने गरेको छ ।
राईले यो ओलम्पिकमा पदक जित्नेमा इटहरी ३ निवासी उनको परिवार पनि आशावादी छ ।
राईले नेपाली सुटिङलाई पनि राम्रोसँग नियालेका छन् । दुई वर्षअघि आफ्नो बन्दै गरेको घर आएका उनले मौका मिलेमा नेपाली खेलाडीलाई पनि सिकाउने बताएका थिए । उनले एसियाडअघि नेपाली खेलाडीलाई सुटिङमा प्रयोग हुने १० डिब्बा एमुनेसन नेपाल पठाएर सहयोग गरेका थिए ।
Posted on 08-07-16 6:12
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when you watch sports you should know the rules. The qualification for next round depends on not 1st or 2nd. It is about the time you completed that round. She completed in 1:08. There are many more who did in less than that time who did not qualify for next round.
Posted on 08-08-16 5:28
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@instagram People who take much longer time than others were put in group 1 and there were only three people and in that group, she finished first. There were 5 groups with total of 33 participants. The persons ranked last in all other 4 groups finished in 1:01 or 1:02 while the topper (gaurika) of group 1 finished in 1:08.
In overall, she came on 31st, the two behind her were the same 2 from her group.
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Posted on 08-08-16 7:30
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Now I am reading articles where she is even being claimed as Indian. What is going on with her citizenship- Nepali/British/Indian? I couldn't even defend myself against my friend claim. Who is she really- Nepali/British/Indian? Game is over on this Olympic for her. However, she has a bright future, and will definitely grab attention of sports fan. Let's see in coming years, which country she will be representing.
I dont think there is a question of citzenship lapsing in her case as of now.
As long she does not renounce her citizenship in writing she will remain an Indian. If she applies for Pakistani Citizenship then her Indian Citizenship will lapse automatically.
In any case she will find it advisable to retain her Indian Citizenship so that the choice will remain with her children to choose the citizenship of either country when they attain the age of 18.
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