Teenage Eritrean distance runner Abel Tsegay of Invicta East Kent AC hopes to emulate success of Olympic Champion Mo Farah and break World Records

People often say that life is about the journey, but for teenage refugee Abel Tsegay it has and always will be about the destination.

Last year the supremely talented 18-year-old achieved one goal by reaching the UK after a perilous two-year journey across land and sea, but he has already turned his attention to using the inspiration of Mo Farah to establish his own name as one of the greatest distance runners in British athletics history.

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Abel was born and raised in the tiny country of Eritrea on the Horn of Africa. The nation of just over five million inhabitants wrenched its independence from Ethiopia after decades of bloody struggles, just three years before Tsegay was born in June, 1996.

Despite its size, Eritrea is the departure point for many thousands of refugees each year, seeking to flee the oppression of an almost military state with more than 300,000 soldiers in constant preparedness for any resumption of hostilities with their giant neighbours to the south.

Two years after beginning his own journey as a 16-year-old, Abel arrived in the UK illegally last year and has since been given support by charity the Kent Refugee Action Network, which has helped him enrol him at Canterbury College, where he is studying English and sports science, and put him in touch with Invicta East Kent Athletics Club.

His coach Peter Mullervy said Abel finds it ‘too traumatic’ to talk about the tribulations of getting to the UK, while the youngster himself politely declined to comment about his ordeal.

Mullervy explained: “He left Eritrea at the age of 16 and as far as I am aware has completely lost touch with his parents. We don’t know very much about his background but we know he spent two years making his way across Europe and only came on the radar at a race in Holland at Christmas 2013.

“He’s gone through all sorts of issues to get himself here and he has the kind of life experience that other athletes couldn’t dream of.”

For his part, however, Abel would prefer to look forward than back, with his focus on emulating World and Olympic 5k and 10k champion Mo Farah, who was born in nearby Somalia and spent time in next-door Djibouti before moving to join his father in London at the age of eight.

Abel – answering written questions in his own words as he is still developing his confidence in spoken English – said: “I have been competing in athletics for four years. 

“My ambition is to be a champion man. I hope to break some of the world records that currently are held by previous athletes.”

He added: “I am aware of the story of Mo Farah. I learned from his experience … with hard work and dedication.

“His accomplishments will motivate me to achieve the same, if not more success in athletics.”

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So is that realistic? Well, Mullervy certainly thinks so.

He revealed: “When he appeared in this country, a charity worker got in touch with me and told me the times he claimed to have run for 10k back in Africa. We took it with a pinch of salt, but then we took him to the track for the first time, without any proper gear, and after watching him we thought ‘maybe it is possible’.”

He added: “Now he’s able to train with proper facilities seven days a week and the results speak for themselves. He’s third in the country over 5km and fourth over 3km.

“He won the European Cross-Country trials in Liverpool (running the 6.7km in a time of 20min 31sec), he’s not eligible to represent Britain yet and didn’t get a medal or any prize money, he got nothing other than the satisfaction of beating the other lads who did get called up to the Europeans.

“Also he was only out-sprinted by the European No.1 in the Lotto Cross in Brussels, Belgium, just before Christmas.”

Abel – who does not turn 19 until June – admitted: “I felt good winning the competition and beating all the competitors. As for the prize and being denied a place in the European XC, it didn’t make me feel bad or demotivate me. I won the tour, that’s more than enough for me.” 

He, however, revealed his burning desire to repay the country he now calls home with success on the international stage in future.

He admitted: “I didn’t know anything about Canterbury before I arrived. I would like to thank the KRAN charity and my coaches Peter and Ralph (for) supporting me (and) helping to get me into my new life, and all the friends I have made at Invicta East Kent.

“Of course I hope with all my heart to represent the UK in international competition in the future. It would mean the world to me.”

Mullervy affirmed: “Abel is good enough that, in two or three years, he could be No.1 in the country at 5k and 10k, and is certainly capable of the same in cross-country too.

“In two years time I fully expect him to be on the international circuit, able to get by as a professional athlete. It’s just a shame he won’t be able to run for Great Britain for a couple of years after that.”

Under Home Office rules it takes fives years of residency for athletes to be able to apply for a British passport which would entitle them to be considered for selection for international competition.

Enquiries with both British Athletics and the Home Office confirm there is no fast-track process, no matter how talented the athlete might be, which means Tokyo 2020 could be the first major event for which Abel is eligible.

Mullervy added: “He wants to stay here and represent the country and we are obviously hoping that things could be sped up and it could be fast-tracked, but at this stage I just don’t know.

“It’s a bit sad they can’t fast track it because he’s a model athlete who works very hard and is a role model for other young athletes.

“He does have a leave to stay in the UK, a blue document which looks just like a passport, and it enabled him to travel to Belgium with us in December and get back through immigration without any problems.”

Farah had to wait five years before representing Britain, qualifying for his passport just in time to compete in European junior competitions as an under-20. Incredibly, Abel  ran as an under-20 at the African Junior Men’s Cross-Country Championships in Cape Town at the age of just 15 in March, 2012, finishing 20th in a time of 24.56 over 8km.

Mullervy added: “He’s a lad of 18 but British youngsters could learn a thing of two from him. He keeps himself clean and tidy, he is always polite and respectful. He is a lovely lad to be around.”

Distance is nothing to Abel Tsegay. He has undertaken an unimaginable journey of more than 5,500km to get to this point in life.

Now he’s arrived, all that’s left is excitement to see just how much further his next few 5k and 10ks can take him.

By: Kent Online

Teklehaimanot wants more success in 2015

Eritrean confident after first season with MTN-Qhubeka

For Daniel Teklehaimanot, the path through professional cycling has been tricky and, at times, hugely frustrating. A former African road and time trial champion, there was a lot of excitement around his signing with Orica-GreenEdge in 2012. However, the relationship was doomed to fail with visa problems blighting much of Teklehaimanot’s time at the team.

After a season with the MTN-Qhubeka team, Teklehaimanot is feeling positive about the year ahead and takes confidence from a good finish at Vuelta a España last season.

“For myself, I have good confidence about my condition. I think I will do some more WorldTour races but the big race is the Tour de France. It is my dream for a long time and for the Africans, and now there are more Africans coming. I am really excited for that,” he told Cyclingnews. “I think that we can do as well as we did in the Vuelta a España or better than.”

Teklehaimanot rode the Vuelta a España for the second time last season as one of only three riders in the team to have ridden a Grand Tour in the past. The 26-year-old made history for Eritrea in 2012 when he became the first from the African nation to ride the Vuelta a España. This year could be equally as ground breaking for the country with three Eritreans in with a shot of riding this year’s Tour de France, including Natnael Berhane and Merhawi Kudus. For Teklehaimanot, it isn’t about making history again he just wants to ride the Tour and bring as many of his compatriots as possible.

“Now we are three (Eritrean) riders in the team. If I want to be part of the team then I need to be in a good condition. I don’t mind if I am the first Eritrean or second Eritrean, it is no problem for me. I just want to be there and in a good condition,” he explained. “It is really important for everybody and it will be a great feeling to be part of a race like the Tour de France. Everybody will be excited. Hopefully my dream will come true.”

The move to MTN-Qhubeka has made life much easier for Teklehaimanot, something that his compatriot Berhane can look forward to this season. It allowed him to ride a much fuller programme that included some of the biggest races on the calendar, such as Milan-San Remo, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, the Tour de Suisse and his return to the Vuelta. It was a stark contrast to his previous season where he was unable to begin his racing until the Critérium du Dauphiné in June and rode only five further events following it.

“When I finished last year, I had a lot of visa problems with the team so I couldn’t continue with the team,” he explained. “(In 2013) the Italian ambassador gave me a visa, in the second part of the season but he only gave it to me for three months.”

MTN-Qhubeka was the perfect option. “I really wanted to be on an African team. I was really happy to be a part of that,” said Teklehaimanot. “They understand everything and I am really grateful of that because, firstly I was back on my bike. I was part of the team and it’s a home team. I am really grateful to them.

“The team has changed with the riders that have come in but we will be more successful this year.”

 

Mussie Zerai: 2015 Nobel Peace Price “The migration crisis is worsening day by day”

February 2, 2015 – Public diplomacy and International Security issues. Good news for Eritrean migraation and Eritrean people.

2015 Nobel Peace Price “The migration crisis is worsening day by day”

Kristian Berg Harpviken, head of the Peace Research Institute, Oslo, named as his favorite Mussie Zerai, a priest from Eritrea living in Italy who has helped some of the thousands of African migrants who have risked their lives to cross the Mediterranean.

Eritrea’s Estifanos wins the Beppu-Oita Marathon with another personal best

Surging away from Japanese rivals Hiroki Kadota and Hiroyuki Yamamoto after 32km, Eritrea’s Tewelde Estifanos won the 64th Beppu-Oita Marathon, an IAAF Silver Label Road Race, in a personal best 2:10:18 on Sunday (1).

After slow start, with the leaders covering the first kilometre in 3:11 and the second kilometre in 3:10, the pace picked up and 5km was reached in 15:27.

The pace then steadily increased: 5km to 10km took 15:08, and the 10-15km split was 14:53.

By 20km, passed in 1:00:43, the lead pack contained 10 runners. At 30km, with a split of 1:31:54), shortly after the pace makers left the course, there were still six runners in contention at the front: Estifanos, Uganda’s 2014 champion Abraham Kiplimo and the  Japanese quartet of Kadota, Yamamoto, Yusei Nakao and Satoshi Yoshii.

However, Estifanos soon started to increase the pace and Nakao and Yoshii were left behind.

The defending champion Kiplimo was the next to let go, leaving Estifanos, Kadota and Yamamoto to fight it out for the top spot on the podium.

Estiganos surged again after 32km; first Yamamoto and then, finally, Kadota had to let him go.

At 35km, the Eritrean was 10 seconds ahead of Kadota who, in turn, was another 10 seconds ahead of Yamamoto.

After 35km, Estifanos steadily slowed, taking 15:52 between 35km and 40km, but he still increased his advantage over his flagging pursuers and won by 28 seconds.

Estifanos became the first Eritrean to win the Beppu-Oita Marathon in its 64 years history and it continued his upward curve over the classic distance. It was the fourth straight personal best in as many marathons and his finishing position has also improved in those four races.

He made his marathon debut in the 2013 Beppu-Oita Marathon, where he was 11th with 2:16:13. Next was the 2013 Gold Coast Marathon where Estifanos improved his time to 2:13:10, when he finished third, and in the 2014 Melbourne Marathon Estifanos improved to second with 2:11:47.

Kadota finished second with 2:10:46, nearly two minutes better than his previous best of 2:12:25, which was recorded in the 2012 Beppu-Oita Marathon.

Yamamoto, a marathon debutant with a half marathon best of 1:02:43, was third with 2:11:48 while Kiplimo fell off the pace after 30km and finished fourth with 2:12:23.

Kiplimo was followed home by Satoshi Yoshii, Naoki Okamoto in 2:12:48 and 2:12:55 respectively.

Ken Nakamura for the IAAF

Azie Tesfai: How being from a third-world country helped me define myself

Jane the Virgin’s Azie Tesfai opens up about the reality of living in a third-world country

As many children are, Azie Tesfai was a picky eater growing up. Staring at the plate of food her mother would put in front of her at any given meal, little Azie would stubbornly insist, ”I don’t want anything.”

But then, something profoundly shifted Tesfai’s life: She went home.

You see, while Tesfai was born in America and was largely raised in Los Angeles by her mother, she is a first-generation immigrant whose family hails from the developing East African countries of Ethiopia and Eritrea — aside from a few other relatives living in the States, most of her family still resides there.

And around the age of 10, Tesfai traveled to her family’s homeland for the first time. To say it changed her would be an understatement.

”When I came back from Ethiopia, I never left anything on my plate,” she said. ”And to this day, I only take what I think I can eat and then I go back and get more — it’s really hard for me to leave food.”

This newfound mind-set ran much deeper than a preoccupation with food, of course. For Tesfai, it was about learning to appreciate what she had and be happier with less. In that respect, travel would become her greatest teacher.

Although she didn’t make her inaugural sojourn to East Africa until she was 10, Tesfai and her immediate family spent the rest of the young girl’s formative years bouncing between the first- and third-world countries.

Experiencing culture shock for the first time

Once, while visiting her family, Tesfai came across a group of children playing in a field. ”I remember asking my mom, ’Why are those kids playing with a rock?’ And my mom was like, ’No, it’s a soccer ball. It’s just been worn and used by them so much.’ You know, it’s like 15 kids and one ball,” she said.

Still, she’d never seen happier children.

So Tesfai and her mom decided to surprise them with a new soccer ball. ”My mom took me to buy them one, and you would think they were given pure gold, based off their excitement,” she remembered. ”They stayed out playing until really late that night, and they were just so happy.”

It was a notion particularly jarring to the young girl from Southern California. ”I thought, ’Oh, wow, my friends in LA have so much more and they’re so miserable,'” she explained. ”So I was really lucky to have that lesson at a really young age.”

It’s not being sheltered from those realities that Tesfai credits with changing her perception and helping to shape the person she is today.

”Once you see things, I always say, you can’t unsee them,” she said. ”Once your heart opens to something, you can’t reclose it, right? So the exposure of it is what really changes people.”

Challenging offensive misconceptions about her ”third-world” life

These days, it would be easy for Tesfai to get swept up in a life of glamour and excess. As Nadine on the CW’s Golden Globe-winning Jane the Virgin, Tesfai is part of one of the hottest shows on television.

Still, she carries East Africa in her heart to keep herself grounded, continuing to split her time between her home base in LA and her homeland. It’s the beautiful dichotomy of her life, albeit one that hasn’t always been easy to harmonize.

Being from a ”third-world country” was a difficult concept for many of her American peers to grasp.

”The misconception people had of Africa in general was that it was one of those commercials of the children with the bellies and the flies,” Tesfai explained. ”Unfortunately, even in a place like L.A., where people tend to be exposed to more, they really had an offensively strong misconception of what it was like.”

Naturally, it was hard finding her place in both worlds. ”It was really hard growing up — mainly coming from Ethiopia and Eritrea back to LA. You come back here and you’re back in school, and everything kind of seems trivial and silly,” she said.

Knowing that it is a simpler life in East Africa but the people are so much happier there with less, Tesfai felt ”sort of protective over it, because I knew how beautiful it was.”

But another notion has also governed many of Tesfai’s choices throughout childhood and into the present: ”It’s not fair that where you’re born can dictate so much of your life,” she said. ”I think that shifted how my whole life went.”

It’s a truth her family knows all too well.

Tesfai’s mother was only able to come to the United States on a technicality. ”My mom came here on a nursing scholarship where four women out of 5,000 that applied were accepted, and she came in fifth. The only rule was that you could not be pregnant, and a week before they left, they found out one of the women was pregnant,” Tesfai revealed, ”so my mom got to come.”

Subsequently, Tesfai is the only member of her family ”fortunate enough” to be born in this country.

”I’ve kind of reminded myself of that and tried to make this my purpose,” said the actress. ”I was lucky enough to be born here, but I have family there. That’s how I’ve rationalized my situation to help transition.”

She also strives to use the influence afforded her by being an actress to channel help back to the people she knows are in need. Enter Fortuned Culture, the jewelry company she founded to help shed light on the dire realities often faced by people in developing countries.

Each jewelry piece symbolizes what the proceeds will help charity partners fulfill. A $30 ”Health” bracelet will feed a child in need 60 meals. A $65 ”Rebirth” necklace provides a caretaker at an orphanage five months’ salary.

”I’ve always wanted to represent a possibility,” she told us, ”and when you see something different or someone doing things differently, hopefully it inspires you that it’s more possible.”

Which is one of the many reasons Tesfai is grateful for her role on Jane the Virgin.

”I know Gina [Rodriguez, who plays Jane] talks a lot about picking roles, but it’s huge,” she said, ”and I think all of the women in our show have talked about the fact we’re very mindful of those roles that we take and the way that we portray ourselves and our cultures.”

The show, remarkably, boasts a cast of women nearly all from other cultures — Rodriguez (”Jane”), Andrea Navedo (”Xiomara”) and Ivonne Coll (”Alba”), Puerto Rican; Yael Groblas (”Petra”), Israeli; Diane Guerrero (”Lina”), Colombian; and, naturally, Tesfai.

As such, the women are fiercely proud of their workplace. ”We all want to represent our cultures in a positive way and advance the cultures and the women in a positive way, so it’s beautiful to be around a bunch of women who are very mindful of that,” said Tesfai.

”I’m inspired being able to work with these women,” she continued, ”and, hopefully, that translates to the people watching it and enjoying it, too.”

Most importantly, perhaps, Tesfai hopes the diverse cast inspires young women and gives them the courage to dare to dream.

”I want to encourage young girls to be writers or directors or follow any creative path and help them realize you can make it a career,” she said. ”They can do whatever they want. You get one life, so follow what your heart’s desire is.”