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Biniam Girmay’s teammates reportedly refused UK visas, as Eritrean star pulls out of Glasgow world championships citing injury

Update: Reports suggest that three members of the Eritrea team have been denied visas, as Girmay – who sources say was issued his visa last week – cited a crash at the Clasica San Sebastián on Saturday as the reason for his withdrawal

UPDATE: Biniam Girmay is understood to have been granted a UK visa last Thursday ahead of this weekend’s world road race championships in Glasgow, a race the Eritrean star will nonetheless be unable to participate in due to injuries he sustained in a high-speed crash at the Clasica San Sebastián on Saturday.

A source with knowledge of the application process told road.cc that Girmay was issued with a UK visa on Thursday 27 July, the day before another member of the Eritrea team had their application approved.

However, the visa status of the other three Eritrean riders who have been reportedly denied entry to the UK, Natnael Tesfatsion, Merhawi Kudus, and Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier, remains unclear, with a spokesperson for the Home Office saying earlier today that the department does not “routinely comment on individual cases”.

A Home Office spokesperson told road.cc: “All visa applications are carefully considered on their individual merits in line with the Immigration Rules. We have been working closely with the organisers to ensure that participants of this event are clear on the visa application process and timelines.”

While Girmay may have been, contrary to initial reports, issued with a visa last week, he will not be making the trip to Scotland for the world road race championships – one of the 23-year-old’s big targets for the season – after sustaining a hip injury and experiencing “severe pain” in a crash the Clasica San Sebastián.

“I’m of course very disappointed to withdraw from the selection for the World Championships, which were a main goal for this season since last winter,” Girmay, who took silver in the U23 men’s road race at the 2021 world championships in Leuven, said in a statement this morning.

“I had a good feeling after the Tour de France, but my crash in the Clasica San Sebastián caused too severe pain to be able to defend my chances in the worlds.

“My priority is now to recover from this crash and then the preparation for the last part of the season, with nice goals in one day races such as the Grand Prix de Plouay and Canadian classics.”

The Giro d’Italia stage winner’s Intermarché-Circus-Wanty team refused to comment on the rumours surrounding their rider’s visa application earlier today, and instead emphasised that “our priority now is the health of Biniam Girmay”.

See original article below:

Biniam Girmay has pulled out of the UCI world road race championships in Glasgow on Sunday, citing the injuries he sustained in a high-speed crash at the Clasica San Sebastián on Saturday as the reason for his last-minute withdrawal – just hours after reports emerged that the 23-year-old, along with three of his teammates on the Eritrean national team, had been denied visas to the UK.

With his classics pedigree and finishing kick, Gent-Wevelgem and Giro d’Italia stage winner Girmay, despite missing out on a stage win at his debut Tour de France last month, would have started Sunday’s road race as one of the favourites on the punchy Glasgow city centre circuit.

However, the Intermarché-Circus-Wanty rider confirmed this morning that “severe pain” in his hip, stemming from a crash at over 60kph at the Clasica San Sebastián, has forced him to pull out of the Glasgow worlds, his major target for the 2023 season.

> Biniam Girmay makes African cycling history at Gent-Wevelgem

Girmay’s withdrawal, notably, comes just hours after reports emerged that the 23-year-old, along with three of his Eritrean teammates, were denied visas to the UK, putting their spots in the road race in jeopardy.

According to GCN, Girmay, Natnael Tesfatsion, Merhawi Kudus, and Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier (all WorldTour riders) were refused visas, and are currently re-applying for entry to the UK with just four days to go until the peloton leaves Edinburgh on Sunday morning.

Girmay and Tesfatsion 2022 Giro d'Italia (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Girmay celebrates with Natnael Tesfatsion after becoming the first black African to win a stage of the Giro d’Italia last year (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

The report also noted that three members of the seven-rider team, Natnael Berhane, Henok Mulubrahn, and Dawit Yemane, have been granted visas, with one of the team submitting their application last Monday and having it approved the following Friday.

It is currently unclear on which grounds the visa applications for the four other riders were denied. 

Responding to road.cc’s request for comment, the Home Office said that “we do not routinely comment on individual cases”.

The department’s spokesperson told road.cc: “All visa applications are carefully considered on their individual merits in line with the Immigration Rules. We have been working closely with the organisers to ensure that participants of this event are clear on the visa application process and timelines.”

The Eritrean Cycling Federation has also been contacted, but is yet to respond.

EF Education-EasyPost’s Kudus, one of the riders affected by the team’s visa issues, appeared to confirm the reports this morning, retweeting the original article with the caption “Sad!!”

Girmay’s Intermarché-Circus-Wanty team, meanwhile, has told road.cc that it is also unable to comment on the rumours and that “our priority now is the health of Biniam Girmay”.

Nevertheless, Intermarché’s social media team did appear to allude to the reports this morning, retweeting an older post gently mocking both the squad’s plethora of sponsors and Lizz Truss’ brief spell as UK Prime Minister. The retweet has since been deleted, however.

Intermarché-Circus-Wanty Lizz Truss retweet

The squad then posted a rather more official account of Girmay’s withdrawal, which they say is due to contusions and pain in his hip, sustained during Saturday’s spill in the Basque Country.

“I’m of course very disappointed to withdraw from the selection for the World Championships, which were a main goal for this season since last winter,” Girmay, who took silver in the U23 men’s road race at the 2021 world championships in Leuven, said in a statement.

“I had a good feeling after the Tour de France, but my crash in the Clasica San Sebastián caused too severe pain to be able to defend my chances in the worlds.

“My priority is now to recover from this crash and then the preparation for the last part of the season, with nice goals in one day races such as the Grand Prix de Plouay and Canadian classics.”

Biniam Girmay 2022 Giro d'Italia (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

While Girmay’s statement ignores the visa-shaped elephant in the room, visas have long proved tricky obstacles for riders from Africa to navigate, often acting as a barrier to turning professional in Europe. When it comes to the world championships in Scotland, this issue is made even more difficult for the continent’s Europe-based riders following the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.

The Eritrean team’s anxious wait this week isn’t the first time that visa issues have scuppered riders’ hopes at the worlds. Last year, American Lawson Craddock missed out on representing his country in Wollongong after a host of complications and delays saw his visa finally come through 20 minutes after his flight to Australia had departed.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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11 comments

Avatar
pockstone | 1 year ago
1 like

I'm looking forward to the next test match series/Euro footy champ'ships/Eskimo ear tugging internationals held in the UK. All we have to do is refuse half the teams a visa and we're home and dry with the trophy in the bag.

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leipreachan replied to pockstone | 1 year ago
0 likes

Football? no.. Football is above them all.

Avatar
Fignon's ghost | 1 year ago
1 like

Let's be honest, yes. He's dodged a bullet.

Avatar
Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
3 likes

As much as I'd like to blame brexit benefits for this one Im not sure we can.

Visa's have always been a mess because UK and Ireland arent/werent Schengen countries and 95% of the rest of Europe is.

Interestingly if the Govt wasnt obsessed about trying and failing stopping poor brown people coming in joining Schengen would solve a lot of people movement issues without looking like a Brexit climbdown, if you chose to spin it that way.

Not that the rabids would see it that way.

Avatar
Paul J replied to Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
6 likes

Ireland is not a member of Schengen solely because UK refused to join - it would be insane to do anything that then required onerous checks on travel (of goods or people) within the island of Ireland.

No goverment would do that, right?

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the little onion | 1 year ago
2 likes

Classic home office - this happens ALL the time!

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mattsccm replied to the little onion | 1 year ago
3 likes

Wow. Home office and cyling experts postig above. About as useful as the original article. Pure clickbait. 

Why do both magazines/websites/journalists spout twaddle without proof? Complete non story until something is concrete as is the commenting until proof is known. 

Avatar
the little onion replied to mattsccm | 1 year ago
9 likes

Well, we don't know for sure what has happened. You are right. And the truth might not come out for a while.

 

My view was based on having a lot of experience in organising events with international guests, often quite high profile people in their fields, and ironically often for events partially or entirely paid for by the UK government, only for visas, often for the home office to refuse them a visa for spurious reasons. E.g. we were once trying to get a professor with Ghanain citizenship, currently living and working in Norway, into the UK for an event. They were turned down because the home office said they might abscond in search of a job here. The fact that a typical Norwegian university professor earns over £100k a year was entirely lost on the home office. I wouldn't be surprised if the home office thought Girmay might abscond, despire presumably being a well paid member of the pro-peleton, perhaps to moonlight under the radar as a deliveroo cyclist.....

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capedcrusader replied to the little onion | 1 year ago
2 likes

He hasn't got a chance all the Uber/Deliveroo boys are electrified and scoot around at light speed. Even the single-speeders have given up trying to compete. 

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Secret_squirrel replied to mattsccm | 1 year ago
2 likes

mattsccm wrote:

Complete non story until something is concrete as is the commenting until proof is known. 

And yet you were so upset by the clickbait that you felt the need to comment.......

GOTCHA!  Road.CC 1 - 0 Mattsccm

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to mattsccm | 1 year ago
0 likes

mattsccm wrote:

Wow. Home office and cyling experts postig above. About as useful as the original article. Pure clickbait. 

Its now in MSM.  Clickbait or just leading with the news because they are specialists?

My guess is you're a right winger who feels the bizarre need to somehow defend the Home Office's incompetitent and racist actions.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/aug/02/africas-top-cyclist-biniam...

 

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