1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Bol can't catch a break!

Discussion in 'NBA Dish' started by HOOP-T, Oct 24, 2001.

  1. HOOP-T

    HOOP-T Member

    Joined:
    Jan 26, 2000
    Messages:
    6,053
    Likes Received:
    5
    Since the terrorist attacks, he has been stuck in Egypt. He's trying to get back to see his children in CT, but cannot.

    The poor guy, after all he's been through.

    http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news/ap/20011024/ap-manutebol.html

    Terrorist attacks delay former NBA player's return to America
    By DAVE COLLINS
    Associated Press Writer
    October 24, 2001


    HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- Manute Bol and his family are stranded in Egypt because U.S. visas and refugee documents have been hard to come by since Sept. 11.

    ``I've been detained like a terrorist,'' the 7-foot-7 Bol said Tuesday from his Cairo apartment in an interview with The Associated Press. ``I don't want to stay. It's not safe for me to be here in Egypt. I don't go out. I just sit here.''

    Bol, who played for four NBA teams and the University of Bridgeport, has been in Cairo since July, when he and his family slipped out of his native Sudan after waiting eight months to get out of that wartorn country.

    He wants to come to New Jersey to see his three daughters and son from a previous marriage. Then he wants to settle in the Hartford area to be near several friends he made during college.

    In a few years, the 39-year-old Dinka tribe member will be eligible for his NBA pension.

    During his rookie year with the Washington Bullets in 1985, he set an NBA record with 397 blocks. Bol bounced from Washington to Golden State, Philadelphia and Miami before retiring from the league in 1995. He averaged just 4.2 rebounds and 2.6 points during his career.

    Before Sept. 11, Bol said he had an appointment for Oct. 15 to see U.S. State Department immigration lawyers, who visit Cairo from Italy and Greece once every few months. The officials help people fill out paperwork and get approved for visas and refugee status.

    But the lawyers canceled the appointment, and Bol believes it was because of the terrorist attacks in America and the resulting slowdown in the issuing of visas and approving of refugee status.

    A major stumbling block for Bol has been the status of his 10-year-old half-sister, Acheed. Bol is caring for her, but doesn't have documents to show that he is her legal guardian. Because of that, Bol said, he cannot get visas in Cairo for himself, his wife Ajok and his 2-year-old son.

    Bol said embassy officials have told him that because of Acheed's status, he would have to apply for refugee status for himself and his family and meet with the State Department lawyers. He said they told him he could fly to Italy or Greece to meet with the lawyers.

    ``Everything is becoming a mess,'' said Bol, who lost his green card two or three years ago in Sudan.

    Bol fears he cannot afford the trip to southern Europe, where he would have to spend a week while waiting to see American officials.

    He made millions of dollars in his 10 years in the NBA, but diverted much of it to his extended family in Sudan and to rebels fighting the Sudanese government. Since then, he has fallen on hard times, having been forced to sell his two homes in Africa while a bank foreclosed on his home in the United States.

    Bol said he misses America. He watches the news every day to see what is happening in the aftermath of the attacks.

    ``It was a very sad thing,'' Bol said. ``For somebody that lived there for 15 years, it is real hard. It's very scary.''

    Bol said he and his friends tried to warn American officials after the World Trade Center bombing in 1993 that terrorism was a very real threat and it could happen again in America.

    Ed Bona, Bol's cousin and a former European pro basketball player who lives in West Hartford, said he and other friends of Bol have been trying to get immigration lawyers to see Bol in Cairo.

    ``We're trying to help him,'' said Bona, who works for the state Department of Economic and Community Development. ``It got screwed up because of the events of Sept. 11.''

    Before the terrorist attacks, Bona said the end of Bol and his family's saga was in sight. But now it has faded away.

    ``We thought we'd have a happy ending by now,'' Bona said. ``But we have to wait. We're waiting. We're still waiting.''
     
  2. Stevierebel

    Stevierebel Member

    Joined:
    Jan 17, 2001
    Messages:
    3,140
    Likes Received:
    119
    I don't know where I read it but somewhere today it said he was back in the states.
     
  3. red

    red Member

    Joined:
    Jun 16, 2001
    Messages:
    3,510
    Likes Received:
    278
    as much as i like bol...he needs to stop having babies...
     
  4. PhiSlammaJamma

    Joined:
    Aug 29, 1999
    Messages:
    29,970
    Likes Received:
    8,054
    When he started hitting three pointers it wasn't hard to figure out that he made a deal with the devil. So his luck ran out a long time ago...
     
  5. neXXes

    neXXes Member

    Joined:
    May 30, 2001
    Messages:
    464
    Likes Received:
    0
    How old do you have to be to receive an NBA pension? and how much is it?
     

Share This Page