Krystsina Tsimanouskaya during a press conference in Poland
Krystsina Tsimanouskaya said she feared for her safety after criticizing Belarusian Olympic officials
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  • A Belarusian sprinter says she now wants to compete for Poland after defecting during the Tokyo Olympics.
  • After criticizing her coaches, Krystsina Tsimanouskaya was ordered to return home but refused to board the plane.
  • Tsimanouskaya said she feared imprisonment back home after her falling out with the coaches.
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Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya says she wants to compete for Poland after defecting during the Tokyo Olympics.

Following her criticism of her coaches, Tsimanouskaya says she was forcibly taken to the airport, but refused to board the plane and was placed under Japanese police protection.

She told authorities that she feared being jailed if she returned home to Belarus after the social media criticism of her coaches.

On leaving Japan, Tsimanouskaya then flew to Poland, and now says she wants to switch allegiances to the country.

"We are now going to try to change my sporting citizenship so that I can compete for the Polish national team.

"I have decided to stay in Poland and compete for the Polish national team," the 24-year-old said, as reported by Reuters.

Tsimanouskaya's complaints came after she said she was entered into the 4x400 meter relay with little notice and having not trained for the event. She was also stopped from competing in her favored event, the 200 meters.

"They [Belarus Olympic committee officials] didn't explain to me anything. I was just told to pack my things. They bought me a ticket and escorted me to the airport," she said, according to Belarusian journalist Tadeusz Giczan.

The Belarusian leader, Alexander Lukashenko, has been described as Europe's "last dictator" and in the past journalists and politicians have disappeared under his regime. Additionally, in August 2020, several Belarusian soccer players were imprisoned.

At the time, the sprinter took to Twitter to implore the International Olympic Committee to help her and asked them to intervene.

On August 3, the IOC launched an investigation and sought answers from the the Belarusian National Olympic Committee.

At the time, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Belarus' attempt to send Tsimanouskaya home against her will an act of "transnational repression" on Twitter.

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