Mass players defections have happened before. Image
source: eritrieadaily.net
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Ten players from the
Eritrean football team are seeking asylum in Botswana, the latest in a series
of defections by athletes from a country under investigation by the United
Nations for human-rights violations. The Eritrean national team was in Botswana to
play a World Cup qualifying match. The players refused to board their plane
home on Wednesday and were detained by police, Dick Bayford, who has been hired
by the Eritrean Movement for Democracy and Human Rights (EMDHR) to represent the
players, told Reuters.
"I
have been engaged by the movement to assist in keeping the football players in
the country after they received reports that there was an attempt to forcibly
remove the players from Botswana," he said.
Reuters report continues:
Similar
mass defections by Eritrean soccer players occurred in Kenya in 2009, Tanzania
in 2011 and Uganda in 2012. They were fleeing a country where slavery-like
practices are routine and torture widespread, the United Nations said after a
year-long investigation.
The
investigation also found that Eritrea subjected its citizens to indefinite
national service and killed people who try to flee the country, according to a
U.N. report. The Eritrean Foreign Ministry dismissed the report without
addressing specific allegations.
That
investigation has now been extended for a second year. The U.N. Human Rights
Council wants the extended investigation to consider whether Eritrea was
committing crimes against humanity, a level of offence that can be prosecuted
by the International Criminal Court.
Bayford
said the EMDHR was worried that the players, who are said to be part of the
Eritrean army, are likely to be charged with desertion if they are sent back to
Eritrea, which is punishable by death.
He
said the players were being kept at a police station in Botswana's second city
of Francistown, where the match was held on Tuesday. Botswana won the game 3-1
and advanced to the next stage of the World Cup qualifiers.
Government officials were
not immediately available for comment in either country. The rest of the 24-man
delegation went back to Eritrea on Wednesday morning.
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