Of the 987 medals that will be won in Paris, surely none will be as significant as this.
Cindy Ngamba, born in Cameroon but raised in Bolton, made history at the North Paris Arena by becoming the first member of the Refugee team to ever secure an Olympic medal.
The boxer beat France’s Davina Michel to reach the 75kg semi-finals, which guarantees at least a bronze, in what is not only one of the stories of these Games, but surely one of the stories of any Games.
Ngamba, who carried the flag at the opening ceremony, celebrated her win by grabbing a board with the refugee team’s name written on it - a team of just 37 athletes that represents more than 120 million people around the world.
She is their captain, their leader and now an Olympic legend.
“It means the world to me,” she said.
“I am a human, just like everyone else on the refugee team and just like everyone else around the world. I want to change the colour and make it a gold.
“To all refugees around the world, keep on believing. You can achieve whatever you set your mind too.
“A lot of people won’t believe in you, a lot of people didn’t believe in me, but at the end of the day, it is just me in the ring. Only I can control the outcome.”
History made ❤️
— Eurosport (@eurosport) August 4, 2024
Cindy Ngamba beats Davina Michel to reach the women’s middleweight semi-finals and secure the first Olympic medal in Refugee Olympic Team history 👏@RefugeesOlympic @Refugees #Paris2024 #Homecrowd pic.twitter.com/wrHasN3pXi
A little over a decade ago, Ngamba had never heard of boxing, but in truth she has been fighting all her life.
Born in Cameroon, she grew up with her mother but moved to Bolton aged 11 to live with her father.
Settling was tough. She was bullied for her limited English, her weight, and her culture, but eventually made Bolton her home despite not having UK citizenship and lived a normal life. She even studied criminology at Bolton University.
Cindy and brother Kennet applied for UK papers several times, but the Home Office did not want to know. Five years ago, they were detained at an immigration office because of paperwork issues and sent to a London detention centre, where they were held overnight and threatened with deportation back to Cameroon.
“Every little thing that has happened in my life since coming to the UK, I see it in a good way because if it didn’t happen I would not be where I am right now,” she said.
Ngamba was scared to go back to Cameroon – and not just because it ranked worse than Lebanon and Palestine in the 2023 Global Peace Index.
Ngamba is gay and, in Cameroon, homosexuality can be punished with up to five years in prison.
“The mindset is very different,” she said. “During my cases, I tried to use my boxing, me going to school or college but the Home Office did not want to hear any of it.
“You could get put in prison or get killed and with me being gay, I could not get sent back.”
Boxing was Ngamba’s solace. In Cameroon, she used to kick makeshift balls made out of socks or plastic bags, but discovered boxing when she was 15 and in Bolton.
She trains with the GB Boxing team that has launched the careers of Anthony Joshua and Nicola Adams but is unable to compete for Team GB as she does not have a British passport.
The magic has still rubbed off, however. Ngamba has won 26 of 30 amateur fights, with seven of those victories coming inside the distance.
She now faces Panama’s Atheyna Bylon in the semi-finals. Lose and she walks away with bronze, win and she has a shot at gold.
“The French crowd did not believe in me,” she said.
“Now I want to show everyone what I can do.”
Both in boxing and in life, she already has.
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