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2006 Commonwealth Games

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18th Commonwealth Games
colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" class |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Host city | Melbourne, Australia |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Nations participating | 71The four Home Nations of the United KingdomEngland, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland — send separate teams to the Commonwealth Games, as do the three Crown DependenciesJersey, the Isle of Man and Guernsey — and 9 of the 14 British Overseas Territories. The Cook Islands and Niue, non-sovereign territories in free association with New Zealand, and Norfolk Island, an external territory of Australia, also compete separately. There are thus 53 members of the Commonwealth of Nations, but 71 competing teams at the Commonwealth Games. |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Athletes participating | approx. 4,500 |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Events | 247 in 16 sports |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Opening ceremony | March 15, 2006 |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Closing ceremony | March 26, 2006 |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Officially opened by | Queen Elizabeth II |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Queen's Baton Final Runner | John Landy |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Main Stadium | Melbourne Cricket Ground |- style="vertical-align:top;" | Motto | United by the moment |}

The 2006 Commonwealth Games were held in Melbourne, Australia between March 15 and March 26. It was the largest sporting event ever to be staged in Melbourne, eclipsing the 1956 Summer Olympics in terms of the number of teams competing, athletes competing, and events being held.

The site for the opening and closing ceremonies was the Melbourne Cricket Ground which was also used during Melbourne's 1956 Olympic Games.

The mascot for the games was Karak[link], a Red-tailed Black Cockatoo (a threatened species).

For the first time ever, the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games appointed a Goodwill Partner, Plan International Australia.

Sports

Rugby at the 2006 games
Enlarge
Rugby at the 2006 games

The 2006 Commonwealth Games included 16 sports, with 12 individual sports and 4 team sports. In total there are 247 events at the Games.

Four of these sports are further broken down into separate disciplines, making a total of 24 disciplines:
  • Aquatics: diving, swimming, synchronised swimming.
  • Cycling: track, road, mountain bike.
  • Gymnastics: artistic, rhythmic.
  • Shooting: clay target, pistol, small bore and air rifle, full bore rifle.
The athletics, swimming, table tennis and weightlifting sports include fully integrated events for elite athletes with a disability (EAD). These events are included in the official medal tally.

Medals table

2006 Commonwealth Games medal count 50px
Pos Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
1
Australia
84 69 68 221
2
England
36 40 34 110
3
Canada
26 29 31 86
4
India
22 17 11 50
5
South Africa
12 13 13 38
6
Scotland
11 7 11 29
7
Jamaica
10 4 8 22
8
Malaysia
7 12 10 29
9
New Zealand
6 12 13 31
10
Kenya
6 5 7 18
11
Singapore
5 6 7 18
12
Nigeria
4 6 7 17
13
Wales
3 5 11 19
14
Cyprus
3 1 2 6
15
Ghana
2 0 1 3
Uganda
2 0 1 3
17
Pakistan
1 3 1 5
18
Papua New Guinea
1 1 0 2
19
Isle of Man
1 0 1 2
Namibia
1 0 1 2
Tanzania
1 0 1 2
22
Sri Lanka
1 0 0 1
23
Mauritius
0 3 0 3
24
Bahamas
0 2 0 2
Northern Ireland
0 2 0 2
26
Cameroon
0 1 2 3
27
Botswana
0 1 1 2
Malta
0 1 1 2
Nauru
0 1 1 2
30
Bangladesh
0 1 0 1
Grenada
0 1 0 1
Lesotho
0 1 0 1
33
Trinidad and Tobago
0 0 3 3
34
Seychelles
0 0 2 2
35
Barbados
0 0 1 1
Fiji
0 0 1 1
Mozambique
0 0 1 1
Samoa
0 0 1 1
Swaziland
0 0 1 1
245 244 254 743

Calendar

|- |bgcolor=#00cc33|   ●   ||Opening ceremony|| bgcolor=#3399ff|   ●   ||Event competitions || bgcolor=#ffcc00|   ●   ||Event finals||bgcolor=#ee3333|   ●   ||Closing ceremony |-

|- ! March !! 15th ! 16th ! 17th ! 18th ! 19th ! 20th ! 21st ! 22nd ! 23rd ! 24th ! 25th ! 26th |- | Ceremonies || bgcolor="#00cc33" align="center" | || || || || || || || || || || || bgcolor="#ee3333" align="center" | |- | Athletics || || || || || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | || |- | Badminton || || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●●●●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●●●●● |- | Basketball || || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#3399ff" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●● || bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ● || || |- | Boxing || ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| |- | Cycling|| ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center||| ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center||| ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center||| ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center| |- | Diving || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● |- | Gymnastics || ||bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ● ||bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●||bgcolor="#ffcc00" align="center" | ●● || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●●●●●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●●●●●|| || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●●|| bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●●●● |- | Hockey || ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || || || || |- | Lawn Bowls || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || |- | Netball || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || || || || |- | Rugby 7s || || bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || || || || || |- | Shooting || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || || || || |- | Squash || ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || ||bgcolor=#3399ff align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| |- | Swimming || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● || bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● || bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● || bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || || |- | Synchronised Swimming || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || |- | Table Tennis || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|● || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|●|| || || || |- | Triathlon || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || || |- | Weightlifting || || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || ||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center|||bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center||| || || || |- ! March !! 15th ! 16th ! 17th ! 18th ! 19th ! 20th ! 21st ! 22nd ! 23rd ! 24th ! 25th ! 26th

Highlights

Opening Ceremony - March 15

2006 Commonwealth Games Opening Ceremony
Both the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the Yarra River were centrepieces for the ceremony, which included many fireworks, and other spectacle. The Games were opened by Queen Elizabeth II, in her capacity as Head of the Commonwealth. The Queen is also Head of State of a number of Commonwealth countries.

Day 1 - March 16

Cycling
England managed a clean sweep of the 4,000 m individual pursuit gold medal on the cycle track. Paul Manning beat fellow team mate Rob Hayles in the final. Steve Cummings won the bronze medal race. Australian Ben Kersten manages to beat the World and Olympic champions in the 1 km time trial.
Swimming
Scotland's Caitlin McClatchey beat Australia's Libby Lenton in the Women's 200 m Freestyle Final, setting a new Games record of 1
Weightlifting
The Games' first Gold medal was awarded in the Women’s Weightlifting (48 kg class) to Kunjarani Devi Nameirakpam from India. Marilou Dozois-Prevost from Canada won the silver, and Erika Yamazaki of Australia picked up the bronze.

Day 2 - March 17

Cycling
Australians Kate Bates and Rochelle Gilmore get gold and silver respectively in the Women’s 25 km Points Race, repeating their Manchester Games results. Their teamate Alexis Rhodes took ninth place after being seriously injured in Germany in an accident that took the life of Amy Gillett, in whose honour all three dedicated their ride.
Rugby Sevens
New Zealand win the gold medal at the Telstra Dome with a convincing 29-21 win over England. Fiji win the bronze medal with a 24-17 win over Australia in a game marred by a serious injury to Australian player Scott Fava.
Swimming
Australia gets all three medals in both the Women's 50 m Butterfly and Women's 50 m Breastroke.

Day 3 - March 18

Swimming
Australia swept gold, silver, and bronze in both the Women's 50 m Breaststroke and the 50 m Butterfly. Leisel Jones and Danni Miatke, respectively, won the golds.
Triathlon
Day 3 saw the Australians and New Zealanders completely dominate the triathlon event. After missing out on qualification for the 2004 Athens Olympics, Emma Snowsill took the gold medal with a time of 1
Cycling
Australian cyclist Ryan Bayley won the Men's Sprint, his second gold medal for these Games.

Day 4 - March 19

Athletics
Australian Kerryn McCann successfully defends her 2002 Commonwealth Games gold medal title by winning the women's marathon event with a time of 2
Athletics
Tanzania retained the men's marathon title, Samson Ramadhani taking the gold. Kenya's Fred Mogaka took silver, and England's Dan Robinson took the bronze.
Cycling
The Isle Of Man won their first Commonwealth gold in 20 years, when Mark Cavendish won the men's Scratch Race final. Cavendish held off Australia's Ashley Hutchinson on the final bend to triumph, with Scotland's James McCallum claiming bronze.
Swimming
World champion Jessicah Schipper of Australia swam a Games record in beating team-mate Libby Lenton for the women's 100 m butterfly gold.

Day 5 - March 20

Athletics
Australian Craig Mottram and crowd favourite, is edged out by Augustine Choge in the men's 5000 m by 2 seconds. Choge won in a Games-record time of 12 min 56.41 s. At one stage during the race Mottram ran with 3 Kenyan racers in front of him and 3 Tanzanian racers behind him.
Athletics
Asafa Powell, world record holder, wins the men's 100 m sprint in a time of 10.03 seconds, ahead of Nigeria's Soji Fasuba and the Trinidadian Marc Burns. His Jamaican compatriot, Sheri-Ann Brooks won the women's 100 m in a personal best time of 11.19 s, ahead of South Africa's Geraldine Pillay and Delphine Antangana, of Cameroon.
Squash
The Grinham sisters (Australia) battled for the Gold medal. Natalie triumphed over Rachel 2-9 9-6 9-1 9-6. Peter Nicol won his third Commonwealth Games gold medal. He previously won the singles title in 1998, and the doubles in 2002. He recaptured the singles title in four games, defeating Australia's David Palmer 9-5 10-8 4-9 9-2.
Swimming
Scotland won two more gold medals in the pool, with Caitlin McClatchey and Gregor Tait each winning their second titles in the 400 m freestyle and 200 m individual medley respectively. Australia's Leisel Jones set the first world record of the swimming competition, breaking her own record in the 100 m breastroke with a time of 1

Day 6 - March 21

Swimming
The Australian women's swimming team again asserted their dominance in the pool, breaking the 4 x 100 m Medley Relay world record in a time of 3
Athletics
The Kenyan women finish with Lucy Wangui (31
Athletics
Dean Macey of England overcame injury to win his first major title in the men's Decathlon. Maurice Smith of Jamaica took silver and Australian Jason Dudley earned bronze.

Day 7 - March 22

Athletics
New Zealander Valerie Vili won gold in the women's shot put, setting a new Commonwealth Games record of 19.66 metres.

Day 8 - March 23

Athletics

Australian Jana Pittman delighted the home crowd by retaining her 400 m hurdles title with Britons Natasha Danvers-Smith (England) and Lee McConnell (Scotland) picking up silver and bronze.
Jamaica won gold and silver in the women's 200 m with Sherone Simpson finishing ahead of Veronica Campbell and South African Geraldine Pillay in third.
Cycling
England's Liam Killeen led an England one-two in the men's mountain bike cross country race. The 23-year-old eased home in two hours 13.11 minutes, ahead of team-mate Oli Beckingsale.
Shooting
India's Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore won gold medal in Men's Double Trap.

Day 9 - March 24

Athletics
Australian Nathan Deakes won the mens 50 km walk in a time of 3
Basketball
The Australian men's team beat New Zealand 81-76 to win the first gold medal in this sport at the Commonwealth Games. The English men's team beat Nigeria 80-57 to take the bronze.

Day 10 - March 25

Aquatics
Canadian Blythe Hartley won the Women's 3 m Springboard final with 690.05 points. Australians Chantelle Newbery and Kathryn Blackshaw took silver and bronze repectively.
Australian Matthew Helm won the Men's 10 m Platform with 1085.60 points. Silver went to England's Peter Waterfield with 1030.50 points and bronze went to Canadian Alexandre Despatie with 1016.95 points.
Athletics
England's Nicholas Nieland won the Men's Javelin with a season best throw of 80.10 m. Australians William Hamlyn Harris and Oliver Dziubak both threw 79.89 m with William Hamlyn Harris securing silver on a countback throw of 79.48 on his final thow. Oliver Dziubak took bronze on his countback throw of 78.43.
Nick Willis, gold medallist in the 1500 metres in a time of 3:38.49 mins, became the first athlete from New Zealand to win a track medal for twenty-four years.
Boxing
England dominated the boxing finals day, with Don Broadhurst, Frankie Gavin, James Russan, David Price, and Stephen Smith winning gold medals and Darran Langley winning silver.
Scotland's Kenny Anderson won the Light Heavyweight gold after defeating his opponent, Adura Olalehin, 23-19 after fighting back from 7-13 down after two rounds. During the fight, Olalehin had four points, the same as the margin of victory, awarded against himself for repeatedly holding Anderson.

Day 11 - Closing Ceremony - March 26

Gymnastics
Canadian Alexandra Orlando completed the rhythmic gymanstics competition having won six gold medals - a gold in every rhythmic gymnastics event - to become the fourth competitor to win six gold medals at a single Commonwealth Games.
Cycling
Australians Natalie Bates and Matthew Hayman win the women's and men's road races respectively.
Hockey
In the men’s final, the host nation beat Pakistan 3-0, after leading 1-0 before the break. In the bronze medal play-off, England lost to Malaysia 2-0.
Netball
New Zealand defeats Australia 60-55 in the gold medal match, to become the first country other than Australia to win Commonwealth Games gold in the sport.
2006 Commonwealth Games Closing Ceremony
Both the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the Yarra River were again centrepieces for the ceremony. The games were closed by HRH [

Venues

The following venues were used at the 2006 Commonwealth Games.The sport(s) which were played at that venue is listed after it.

Melbourne venues

Melbourne Cricket Ground — venue for the Opening & Closing Ceremonies and for Athletics
Enlarge
Melbourne Cricket Ground — venue for the Opening & Closing Ceremonies and for Athletics

A panoramic view of the interor of Telstra Dome venue for Rugby 7s
Enlarge
A panoramic view of the interor of Telstra Dome
venue for Rugby 7s

Regional and suburban venues

Ballarat
Ballarat Minerdome
Bendigo
Bendigo Stadium
Geelong
Geelong Arena
Lysterfield Park
State Mountain Bike Course
Traralgon
Traralgon Sports Stadium

Impact on host nation

This section may not conform to the [Neutral point of view>neutral point of view] policy.
A Wikipedian has [POV checknominated this section] to be checked for its neutrality. Discussion of this nomination can be found on the [Australian dollars and a high likelihood the state government will have to cover the expense. The cost has been described in local media as excessive for what many regard as a non-premier sports event.

Melbourne's premier sporting ground, the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), has been recently redeveloped in preparation for the Games. An athlete's village in the inner suburb of Parkville housed approximately 7,000 athletes and support staff during the Games, and is now being transformed into commercial housing with a distinctly eco-friendly image. The creation of this village has attracted controversy, with critics claiming it was created by alienating public parkland, while proponents maintain that it represents the renewal of an otherwise derelict inner-city area. Although experts have questioned whether the affluent suburb can accurately be construed as derelict.

The change from Daylight Saving Time to Standard Time in Australian states that follow it has been pushed back from March 26 to April 2 for 2006 to avoid affecting the games. In order to deal with the change, software company and official technology partner of the Games, Microsoft released a daylight savings patch for their Windows line of operating system. However, they did not modify the start and end rule for the time zones affected, but instead added new timezones with the words "(Commonwealth Games)" which caused various issues with many software applications, including Microsoft Outlook and several accounting packages.

In addition, state and private schools amended their usual term times so as to allow the first term end-of-term holidays to coincide with the Games. [link] This has severely disrupted the timetable for the VCE leaving many students under more stress than is usually expected at this time.

Melbourne's public transport system - train, tram and bus - ran to altered timetables with some amended or substituted services for the duration of the Games. For the most part, timetabled services were unchanged but suffered due to higher loads.

Broadcasting

  • The host broadcaster was Trans World International, while the domestic rights-holding broadcaster is the Nine Network in Australia. They showed rolling coverage, except for a break for the evening news and overnight.
  • In Australia Fox Sports broadcast the Games on eight dedicated digital Pay-TV channels. These were available on the Foxtel, Austar and Optus Vision networks.
  • The BBC covered the Commonwealth Games in the UK on BBC One and BBC Two. BBCi included a choice of two extra video streams on Freeview and four streams on Digital Satellite and Cable [link]. Users with Broadband in the UK could also view all 5 video streams on bbc.co.uk, and the BBC Sport website.
  • CBC, CBC Newsworld, and CBC Country Canada aired a daily one-hour highlights show of the Commonwealth Games in Canada. Compared to past games, the CBC's coverage was minimally staffed, with commentary from other broadcasting partners. At first, they did not even consider bidding for the broadcasting rights [link] due to scheduling conflicts with events Canadians are more interested in, such as the Tim Hortons Brier, World Figure Skating Championships, and the 2006 Winter Paralympics (which itself had been reduced to five-to-ten minute daily coverage). None of Canada's metropolitan newspapers have sent any journalists to report on the Games, instead relying on news agencies
  • TVNZ covered the games for the residents of New Zealand
  • In Malaysia, TV1 broadcasted live coverage of the Games for three hours starting at 10 a.m. Malaysian time and for two hours starting at 3 p.m., with highlights at 12:30 a.m.. Astro also included 3 dedicated channels to broadcast the Games live & delayed broadcast 24 hours to it Sports package subscribers.
  • Singapore's MediaCorp TV had supposedly not broadcast the games due to the high cost of telecast rights, satellite charges and the lack of sponsors. However, on 17 March, the MediaCorp found other sponsors which is the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports and the Singapore Sports Council. Broadcast started from March 18 till the end of the games. [link]
  • In the United States, selected coverage was be carried by Fox College Sports

Participating nations

Countries and places competing at the games
Enlarge
Countries and places competing at the games
There were 71 countries, territories and bodies competing at the 2006 Commonwealth Games[link]. The only difference between the countries competing at these games from the 2002 games is the absence of Zimbabwe, which has now withdrawn from the Commonwealth of Nations. See also Gallery of Logos of Commonwealth Games Associations at the 2006 Commonwealth Games
Commonwealth Games Associations at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Anguilla | Antigua and Barbuda | Australia | Bahamas | Bangladesh | Barbados | Belize | Bermuda | Botswana | British Virgin Islands | Brunei Darussalam | Cameroon | Canada | Cayman Islands | Cook Islands | Cyprus | Dominica | England | Falkland Islands | Fiji | Gambia, The | Ghana | Gibraltar | Grenada | Guernsey | Guyana | India | Isle of Man | Jamaica | Jersey | Kenya | Kiribati | Lesotho | Malawi | Malaysia | Maldives | Malta | Mauritius | Montserrat | Mozambique | Namibia | Nauru | New Zealand | Nigeria | Niue | Norfolk Island | Northern Ireland | Pakistan | Papua New Guinea | Saint Helena | Saint Kitts and Nevis | Saint Lucia | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Samoa | Scotland | Seychelles | Sierra Leone | Singapore | Solomon Islands | South Africa | Sri Lanka | Swaziland | Tanzania | Tonga | Trinidad and Tobago | Turks and Caicos | Tuvalu | Uganda | Vanuatu | Wales | Zambia

Missing athletes

On 20 March 2006 it was reported that two athletes had gone missing from the Commonwealth Games village: Tanzanian boxer Omari Idd Kimweri and Bangladeshi runner Mohammad Tawhidul Islam.

On 22 March 2006 it was reported that seven athletes from Sierra Leone (three women and four men) had also disappeared. A further seven Sierra Leonean athletes also went missing during the course of the Games, bringing the total runaway count to fourteen (two thirds of the team). Victoria Police believed that they had fled to Sydney where the Sierra Leonean community is much larger than Melbourne's.

Two hours before the Closing Ceremony on 26 March, officials from the Cameroon team reported to police that nine of their members had also vanished.

These incidents were not without precedence: 27 athletes similarly disappeared from the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England (21 from Sierra Leone, 5 from Bangladesh and one from Pakistan), and over 80 athletes and officials overstayed their visas after the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.

On request of Sierra Leone officials, the Commonwealth Games Federation cancelled those athletes' Games accreditation, allowing the Australian Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (DIMA) to cancel their visas at midnight on 27 March, and begin investigating their disappearance.

Wikinews has news related to:
At 7.20am on that day, New South Wales Police located six of the Sierra Leonean athletes in a house at Harbord near Manly Beach in Sydney. All six indicated they wished to seek political asylum in Australia, and were granted bridging visas by DIMA while their refugee applications were arranged. The athletes claimed to have been subjected to violence and torture in their home country; seventeen-year-old Isha Conteh stated she could be forced into female circumcision if she returned.[ABC] On Tuesday 28 March, six further Sierra Leoneans turned themselves in to immigration authorities in Sydney and were also granted bridging visas.

Two of the missing Cameroon athletes were found in Perth, Western Australia.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Wikinews has an entire section of news on:

Official websites
Other sites
Political opposition to the Games

Commonwealth Games
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Commonwealth Games Medal Counts
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Commonwealth Games Progressive Overall Medal Counts
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