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A group of Olympians who fled Russia following the invasion of Ukraine are hoping to compete on behalf of the U.S. in the upcoming games.Three Russian fencers — Konstantin Lokhanov, Sergei Bida, and Violetta Bida — are being supported in their bid for U.S. citizenship by the U.S. Olympic Committee and the nation’s fencing association.”All 3 of these individuals have made sacrifices at great personal cost and put their lives at risk to be able to represent our nation,” CEO of U.S. Fencing Phil Andrews told Congress in a Jan. 5 letter.UK TO INCREASE UKRAINE AID TO $3.2B, ITS LARGEST ANNUAL FUNDING SINCE RUSSIA’S INVASION The Paris Olympics 2024 logo is seen on one of the Paris Olympics 2024 official T-shirts on display in a shop at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport in Roissy-en-France, France. (Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)”We ask you to make every effort to support them in the extraordinary circumstance,” he added.Citizenship is the main obstacle the fencers face as the 2024 Paris Olympics approach. The games are set to begin on July 24.”Olympic selection is hotly contested, and of course simply the acquisition of citizenship is urgent to be selected through the ranking system used to decide the majority of Team USA,” Andrews told USA Today.BIDEN MEETS WITH PAUL WHELAN’S SISTER AT WHITE HOUSE AFTER RUSSIA AGAIN REFUSES RELEASE OF FORMER MARINESergei Bida and Violetta Bida are a newlywed couple and are expecting their first child this year, according to a report from USA Today. Because of her pregnancy, Violetta will not be able to compete in Paris.Konstantin Lokhanov was formerly married to the daughter of the president of Russia’s Olympic Committee. The couple divorced following Lokhanov’s decision to flee Russia in protest of the invasion and his wife’s refusal to come along. The logo of the Russian Olympic Committee is seen at the committee’s headquarters in Moscow. (REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov)CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Attorneys representing the Russian Olympians are contacting U.S. representatives and senators seeking support for a bill that would grant them citizen status.The legal team is being led by former Olympic fencer Jack Wiener, who is handling the case pro bono.