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Chicago: Boxers make contact, but still missing

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  • Chicago: Boxers make contact, but still missing

    Chicago Tribune, IL
    Oct 27 2007


    Boxers make contact, but still missing
    No sign of Ugandans, Armenian who fled

    By Shannon Ryan and Angela Rozas | Tribune staff reporters
    8:54 PM CDT, October 26, 2007

    Two of the three missing boxers who were in Chicago for the World
    Boxing Championships have contacted their teams, but two Ugandan
    fighters and one from Armenia have not been located.

    Ugandans Philip Adyaka, 25, and Sharif Bogere, 19, called their team
    Thursday night several hours after the team discovered their luggage
    was no longer at the hotel and the boxers did not show up at UIC
    Pavilion.

    Uganda coach Kent Kibirige Musa said Friday that Adyaka had told him
    he was in Canada, while Bogere, the team captain, is "out of
    Chicago."

    Armenian Vachagan Avagyan, 25, has had no communication with his team
    since leaving Wednesday night.

    The men were all here legally on 90-day tourist visas.

    The teams reported the athletes as missing to the Chicago Police
    Department, but the police are treating the case as a "a voluntary,
    unauthorized absence," said Monique Bond, spokeswoman for the
    department. While there were police reports filed, it was a matter of
    following protocol, she said.

    Musa said the boxers did not provide many details about their
    departures.

    " 'Why did you do that without asking me?' " Musa said he asked them.
    "They say, 'Sorry, sorry, sorry,' but give no explanation."

    He said he suspects they left to attempt to find better training
    outside of their homeland.

    "They want to improve," Musa said.

    Teammate Edwards Akora, who lost in a light welterweight match to
    France's Alexis Vastine Friday, said Adyaka and Bogere did not give
    any hints that they were going to leave the team.

    "They just left us," Akora said. "They didn't give us indication."

    Akora said he did not fear for their safety and suspected they were
    looking for better boxing opportunities.

    "We're not worried," he said. "Maybe they are looking for greener
    pastures."

    Eduard Hambardzumyan, an Armenian team member, who advanced after his
    light welterweight victory, said Avagyan's departure baffled him.

    "No one expected this to happen," Hambardzumyan said, according to
    translator Darja Saar, the secretary of training for the Estonian
    team who is familiar with the Armenian team.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Tim Counts said
    Friday he could not comment whether his agency had been contacted or
    is investigating the incident. But he urged caution in rushing to
    judgment on the whereabouts or intentions of the men.

    "There has not been any indication they have broken any laws here,"
    Counts said. "At this point, there is no one in our custody and it
    has not been determined there has been a violation of law."

    While emphasizing he was not speaking about this case, Counts said it
    is not uncommon for people visiting the United States on guest visas
    to attempt to remain here.

    "It is, as you might guess, fairly common for people to come here on
    a legal visa and violate the terms of that by overstaying," he said.
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