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  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sport for refugees-2.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sport for refugees.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-12.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-41.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-40.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-36.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-34.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-32.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-30.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-29.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-26.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-24.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-23.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-16.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-15.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-9.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-8.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-7.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-6.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-5.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-4.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-3.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-2.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-39.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-38.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-37.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-35.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-33.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-31.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-28.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-25.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-22.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-21.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-20.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-19.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-18.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-17.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-13.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-11.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-10.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-27.jpg
  • Niger, Hamdallaye, Sport in a refugee camp is not just entertainment. Taking part in a football final, learning the basics of basketball, focusing on the moves of a martial art or trying to make a wall in a volleyball game can help to overcome traumas and psychological wounds, as well as the sense of helplessness for what they suffered, and that of guilt, for being saved. This is one of the projects that, at the moment, are being carried out in Hamdallaye, Niger, where the UNHCR is trying to transfer refugees rescued from Libyan prisons and detention centers, waiting for the transition to safe countries, in Europe and the United States. At the beginning of November, thanks to the Milan Football Club Foundation, Hamdallaye inaugurated soccer, volleyball and basketball fields, thanks to which operators and educators will try to help refugees to leave behind their pain, to focus on the future.
    sports for refugees-14.jpg
  • Jessiva Rossi,  Italian sports shooter
    Rossi e Viviani-4.jpg
  • olimpic sports athelts, Elia Viviani and Jessica Rossi
    Rossi e Viviani-3.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi15.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi12.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi11.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi09.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi08.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi06.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi04.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi02.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi16.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi13.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi14.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi10.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi07.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi05.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi03.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi01.jpg
  • Jessiva Rossi,  Italian sports shooter
    Rossi e Viviani.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali.jpg
  • MODENA, Ferrary for special  kids Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine
    Ferrari mini-20.jpg
  • Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine
    Ferrari mini-19.jpg
  • Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine
    Ferrari mini-16.jpg
  • Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine Maranello, Italy, a 3:4 replica of 250 Ferrari Testa Rossa, equipped with electric engine
    Ferrari mini-7.jpg
  • TRENTINO, ITALY, the Ferrari Suv Purosangue
    Ferrari Purosangue-38.jpg
  • TRENTINO, ITALY, the Ferrari Suv Purosangue
    Ferrari Purosangue-67.jpg
  • TRENTINO, ITALY, the Ferrari Suv Purosangue
    Ferrari Purosangue-43.jpg
  • TRENTINO, ITALY, the Ferrari Suv Purosangue
    Ferrari Purosangue-14.jpg
  • Elia Viviani:  Italian professional cyclist, who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam Cofidis.[5] On 10 May 2015, Viviani won his first Grand Tour stage victory at the Giro d'Italia, winning stage 2 in a bunch sprint before Moreno Hofland and André Greipel.[6][7]<br />
<br />
In August 2016 Viviani won gold in the omnium at the 2016 Summer Olympics. In 2021, he won bronze on the omnium at the 2020 Summer Olympics.[8]<br />
<br />
Viviani's nickname in the peloton is "Il Veggente" for his ability to foresee line moves of other sprinters during the sprint.[c
    Rossi e Viviani.jpg
  • Vicenza, Palestra Indipindiente , Fabio Faggionato
    boxe4.tif
  • Riva Del Garda: Dorothea Wierer
    Dorothea Wierer-7.jpg
  • Milano, Andrea Cinciarini con il figlio
    Andrea Cinciarini
  • Lugano, the Lugano FC J goal keeper Joel Kiassumbua
    _AB_1520.btif_resize.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali37.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali28.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali25.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali22.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali20.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali12.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali35.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali34.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali32.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali31.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali30.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali29.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali27.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali26.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali24.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali23.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali19.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali17.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali16.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali15.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali14.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali13.jpg
  • Vincenzo Nibali,  road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders in the world today. fitting some of his winner t-shirts
    Vincenzo Nibali11.jpg
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Alberto Bernasconi

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