Qatar Olympic Committee announced as founding donating partner for Olympic Refugee Foundation

November 16,2024
17-September-2017

Qatar Olympic Committee announced as founding donating partner for Olympic Refugee Foundation

Honorary IOC President Jacques Rogge, Filippo Grandi and Thomas Bach at annoucement of Olympic Refugee Foundation at IOC Session in Lima Peru.jpgDOHA, September 17, 2017-The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced the launch of the Olympic Refugee Foundation at its Session in Lima on Friday 15th September, with the Qatar Olympic Committee (QOC) confirmed as a founding donating partner. The Foundation is aimed at pursuing the work undertaken throughout the Olympic Movement over recent years to support refugees around the world and is a further major initiative that has emerged from the strong and longstanding partnership between the IOC and UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).

Speaking about the QOC's donation, President of the QOC, H.E. Sheikh Joaan Bin Hamad Al Thani, said “The Qatar Olympic Committee has made a donation to the Olympic Refuge Foundation to support the International Olympic Committee and the UN Refugee Agency in the valuable work that they are doing to improve the lives of young refugees around the world through the power of sport.

“The Qatar Olympic Committee shares the belief that having a safe space to be able to practice and play sport is a basic human right, and we are committed to promoting sport as a tool for peace and inclusion in society. Sport spreads solidarity and hope, promotes a healthy lifestyle and brings communities together - and we hope that our contribution to the Olympic Refuge Foundation will have a positive impact on the lives of young people globally."

In a pledge to raise awareness of the magnitude of the refugee crisis – the UNHCR estimates that more than 65 million people have been forced from their homes by war, famine and other man-made and natural disasters – the IOC created the first Refugee Olympic Team at the Olympic Games Rio 2016. The team acted as a symbol of hope and peace for refugees across the globe. They inspired the world with the strength of their human spirit.

The aim of the Olympic Refuge Foundation is to create safe, basic and accessible sports facilities in areas where there are refugees, a displaced migrant population and internally displaced people. Working in close collaboration with the UNHCR and with the relevant partners and local authorities on the ground, the Foundation will develop sporting activities and social development projects that can be implemented in a sustainable way within these safe environments .

The Olympic Refuge Foundation will enter into strategic partnerships with other foundations, international organisations and non-governmental organisations, in order to share experiences and build a collective approach to foster impactful activities that will assist refugees in their social development and integration through sport.

“The IOC has a long-time commitment to refugees around the world. Today we are taking another major step forward by creating the Olympic Refuge Foundation. It was paramount for the IOC to continue to find solutions to help refugees around the globe," said IOC President Thomas Bach. “Working closely with the UNHCR, the Olympic Refuge Foundation will create safe places where young people can not only play sport but also develop skills to help them reconstruct their lives. I would like to thank our founding donating partners, the Qatar Olympic Committee and the Government of Lichtenstein, for supporting the IOC and UNHCR in this project."

Thomas Bach and Filippo Grandi following announcement of Olympic Refugee Foundation.jpgAddressing the Session in Lima, the UNHCR High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said “This Foundation will mean a lot. It will mean a lot for millions of children and young people. It will mean a lot for young people that are amongst the most deprived in the world. People that have lost everything – their homes, often their families, their jobs, even their identity.

“Sport inspires healthy competition in places where competition is often only about weapons, about arms, about money, about drugs, and where violence prevails. We have seen this, we have learned this, we at UNHCR for more than 20 years cooperating with the IOC, and the Foundation we are launching today crowns this very important partnership," Grandi concluded.

The IOC and UNHCR first began their cooperation in 1994. The collaboration has since seen the implementation of sports projects in more than 45 countries, which has allowed for the provision of basic sports equipment, the rehabilitation of sports grounds and the organisation of regular recreational activities.

The Olympic Refuge Foundation had received pledges of financial support from the Qatar Olympic Committee even prior to its launch, as well as from the Government of Lichtenstein. The Foundation will fund projects across the world through the generous donations from Olympic Movement partners, governmental institutions and private donations.