Despite recent defections, Eritrea gives green light for two riders to compete at Tour de France

Having received a wild-card invitation to the Tour, South African team MTN-Qhubeka have an unprecedented five African riders for the July 4-26 event, including Eritrea’s Daniel Teklehaimanot, 26, and Merhawi Kudus, 21.

Eritrea’s Daniel Teklehaimanot and Merhawi Kudus will be among the riders who will try to stop Vincenzo Nibali, centre, from repeating as Tour de France champion next month. Bryn Lennon/Getty Images
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Eritrea’s president has given his backing to the first two cyclists from his country to ride in the Tour de France, despite a spate of defections by sports stars at past international events, state media said on Saturday.

Having received a wild-card invitation to the Tour, South African team MTN-Qhubeka have an unprecedented five African riders in their nine-man team for the July 4-26 event, including Eritrea’s Daniel Teklehaimanot, 26, and Merhawi Kudus, 21.

Eritrea has previously pulled out of international sporting events, including the 2015 African Cup of Nations football tournament, after football teams repeatedly defected when allowed to leave the country. Members of the national football team have defected twice.

But President Isaias Afwerki praised the “remarkable achievement” of the two Eritreans in the team, handing over “racing bicycles and other gifts” to them.

Both cyclists have taken part in races abroad several times before.

“The unprecedented achievement of the cyclists attests to the high technical level that cycling has reached in the country,” Isaias said, according to state media.

“The participation of Eritrea’s top cyclists in international races of high reputation will inspire the youth, who see these successful cyclists as role models.”

A United Nations report earlier this month said some 5,000 people flee each month from the isolated Red Sea state to escape a decades-long national service requirement and human rights violations by the government.

The nearly 500-page UN report, released after a year of investigations, details how the Horn of Africa nation, under Afwerki’s iron-fisted regime for the past 22 years, has created a repressive system in which people are routinely arrested on a whim, detained, tortured, killed or go missing.

Eritreans make up the second-largest number of people risking the dangerous crossing of the Mediterranean Sea, after Syrians, running the gauntlet of ruthless people smugglers and treacherous waters in the hope of reaching the European Union.

Four of the five African MTN-Qhubeka riders took part in the Tour de France warm-up race, the Criterium de Dauphine, where Eritrea’s Daniel Teklehaimanot won the polkadot climbers’ jersey.

There are also three South Africans in the team, Jacques and Reinardt Janse van Rensburg and national champion Louis Meintjes. The other four are from Belgium, Britain, Norway and the United States.

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