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By Karolos Grohmann

LONDON, July 21 (Reuters) – A marathon runner born in what

is now South Sudan will be allowed to run under the Olympic flag

in London, the International Olympic Committee said on Saturday.

As a 16-year-old Guor Marial moved to the United States,

where he has permanent resident status.

Given South Sudan, the world’s newest country recognised

only last year, has not yet established a national Olympic

Committee – and so cannot send a team to the Games starting next

week – Marial was unable to represent that country.

As he is not a U.S. citizen, he was also ineligible to take

part for the Americans.

The IOC had initially suggested Marial run for Sudan, which

has invited him to join their team, the runner told AlertNet, a

humanitarian news service run by Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Marial, who lost 28 members of his family in the civil war,

refused.

Sudan and South Sudan came close to all-out war in April

following border clashes, the worst violence since South Sudan

seceded and declared its independence from Khartoum a year ago

under a 2005 peace agreement that ended decades of civil war.

The 28-year-old reached the Olympic qualification time in

October last year and improved his personal best in San Diego,

California, last month, finishing in two hours 12 minutes 55

seconds.

Three athletes from the former Netherland Antilles will also

compete under the Olympic flag.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)