Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya
Krystsina Tsimanouskaya said she has been taken to the airport against her wishes and will not return home.
Reuters
  • An Olympian from Belarus was taken to the airport against her will, but said she wouldn't go home.
  • The International Olympic Committee said she is "safe and secure" with Japanese authorities.
  • She arrived at the Polish embassy in Tokyo on Monday, Sky News reported.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

An Olympic athlete from Belarus is under Japanese police protection after she said she was taken to the airport against her will after criticizing her coaches and said she does not want to go home.

Krystsina Tsimanouskaya, 24, was involuntarily taken to Tokyo-Haneda airport on Sunday, Reuters reported.

But the sprinter told Reuters that she did not want to be taken home: "I will not return to Belarus."

"I am afraid that in Belarus they might put me in jail," she told the Belarusian news agency Zerkalo.io.

"I am not afraid that I will be fired or kicked out of the national team, I am worried about my safety. And I think that at the moment it is not safe for me in Belarus."

Sky News reported that she was seen arriving at the Polish embassy in Tokyo on Monday after spending the night at an airport hotel.

International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams said that Tsimanouskaya was now being looked after by Japanese authorities, the BBC reported.

Adams said she's "safe and secure," according to Axios.

Tsimanouskaya ran in the women's 100-meter heats on Friday, and was scheduled to compete in the women's 200-meter heats on Monday.

As Insider's Joshua Zitser previously reported, she allegedly complained on Instagram that she was entered into the 400-meter relay, due to take place on Thursday, with little notice and without having trained for the event.

She told Reuters that she was taken from the team because she "spoke on Instagram about the negligence of our coaches."

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