Like Lomong, profiled above, Joey Cheek is a U.S. Olympian. Cheek (left) won gold and silver speedskating medals at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. That year the U.S. Olympic Committee named him the male athlete of the year -- as noted by the official website of the Olympic Games set to begin tomorrow.
Yet the host of this summer's games, China, has revoked Cheek's visa to attend.
Why?
Turns out Cheek is a founder of Team Darfur, "an international coalition of athletes committed to raising awareness about and bringing an end to the crisis in Darfur, Sudan." (credit for images) In a few years its ranks have swollen to more than 360 athletes from dozens of countries. Turns out at least 1 other Team Darfur member, the synchronized-swimming-bronze-medalist-turned-journalist at right, Kendra Zanotto, also was denied a visa.
And it's alleged
that four athletes competing in Beijing who are part of Team Darfur were pressured by the Chinese Embassies in their respective countries to withdraw from Team Darfur. They were told they would otherwise be closely watched and dubbed as 'troublemakers' ....
Such moves seem unlikely to stifle all talk of Darfur -- or of China's ties to the regime of President Omar al-Bashir, whom the International Criminal Court Prosecutor's charged with genocide and crimes against humanity in Darfur. For it's estimated that more than 70 Team Darfur members will compete in Beijing.
One of those Team Darfur athletes is Lomong, the onetime Sudanese "Lost Boy" chosen to lead his team into the Olympic stadium.