Paris Olympics: Cindy Ngamba on fighting for British citizenship and her dream of competing at the Games
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Cindy Ngamba (left) won gold at the World Boxing Cup: GB Open in Sheffield in January
Nothing in life has come easy for Cindy Ngamba.
Since moving to the UK aged 10, Cameroon-born boxer Ngamba, who will compete at the 2024 Paris Olympics, has had to overcome obstacles at every turn, on a personal and professional level.
After 15 years in England, the country she now proudly calls home, Ngamba is still fighting to be granted a visa and UK citizenship.
Without a British port, Ngamba cannot fight for Team GB in this summer's Olympics.
But her dream of being at the Games remains intact after she won a scholarship with the IOC refugee team.
Before earning refugee status, Ngamba's right to remain in the UK was precarious.
At 20, Ngamba was on the verge of being deported after attending what she thought was a routine g-on process to let authorities know she was still in the country.
Ngamba was arrested, along with her brother Kennet, and sent from Manchester to a detention camp in London, for reasons she is still yet to get complete clarity on.
She was released the next day following a phone call with her uncle who lives in Paris and works for the government.
"Imagine thinking you're just going to sign then go back to your house to go about your day and then you're put in the back of a van with handcuffs on," Ngamba told BBC Sport.
"I got sent to London and when I was there I spoke with loads of females. Some told me they had been there for many months and years. Some were going to be sent back to their country the next day and I'm thinking 'am I going to be sent back next"Billion Dollar Downfall: The Dealmaker " loading="lazy" src="https://image.staticox.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fichef.bbci.co.uk%2Face%2Fstandard%2F480%2Fsprodpb%2Fc1f3%2Flive%2F64425c60-42e5-11f0-835b-310c7b938e84.jpg" width="385" height="216" class="ssrcss-11yxrdo-Image edrdn950"/>