JUBA, South Sudan
Thousands of people turned out on Thursday to give a hero's welcome to South Sudan's basketball team after their first ever appearance at an Olympic Games.
The performance of the Bright
Stars in Paris has been a source of joy for the world's youngest nation, even
though their dreams of medal glory were dashed when they failed to reach the
quarter finals after group stage defeats by the United States and Serbia.
"The whole world now
knows who South Sudan is...through basketball," team captain Kuany Kuany
told jubilant fans at a stadium in Juba.
The players were welcomed by
fans and dignitaries at the airport before a procession took them to the
stadium where they were feted with a ceremony featuring traditional dance and
musical performances.
Kuany said their Olympic
appearance was a "uniting factor" for the nation, which was plunged
into civil war just two years after its 2011 independence and remains plagued
by political and ethnic violence, poverty and corruption, as well as frequent
natural calamities.
In just four years, South
Sudan Basketball Federation (SSBF) president Luol Deng - a refugee turned NBA
star who is the driving force behind the team - has made the Bright Stars one
of the best in Africa.
"It's a very similar
story to what South Sudan is as a country right now," he told the crowds.
Deng said he hoped the Bright
Stars' appearance at the Olympics and also the Basketball World Cup in August
last year would inspire the nation's youth.
"A lot of people don't
give us chances, a lot of people don’t believe in us but because of what we are
doing people have started seeing potential and we’re on our way."
Deng enjoyed a 15-year career
in the NBA, shining in the Chicago Bulls jersey from 2004 to 2014 and earning
two All Star selections in 2012 and 2013.
South Sudan, who began their
Olympic debut with a win over Puerto Rico, gave the US a scare when they played
in a warm-up game in London on July 20.
However, there was never any
threat of an upset when they two sides met in the northern French city of
Lille, and the US won by 103-86.
"Everybody has been part
of this journey and this is just the beginning," said Nuni Omot, one of
the Bright Stars players.
"You know this is the
start of something that's going to be special."
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