Afghan refugee pursues his dream of
boxing in Tokyo
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[February 26, 2020]
By Victoria Waldersee
LISBON (Reuters) - A young Afghan
refugee living in Portugal is attempting to achieve in 10 months
what normally takes years of preparation - qualifying to box in the
Olympics.
But 22-year-old Farid Walizadeh, who faces his first international
qualification challenge next month ahead of the Tokyo 2020 games, is
no stranger to uphill struggles.
At the age of seven, he fled his hometown in northeastern
Afghanistan, traveling more than 2,500 km (1,550 miles), mostly on
foot, to Turkey. There he was arrested on arrival after smugglers he
had met on the way loaded him up with a backpack they said contained
sugar but was in fact filled with drugs.
"I'd lost my house, my childhood, my life ... but you can build
everything again," he said, speaking in English.
Farid's mother had fled religious persecution to Pakistan. His
father was in the military. Conflicts over land rocked the Afghan
city where he lived with his adoptive parents. "I didn't have a
choice. I had to leave," Farid said.
"We were a group of 200 people at first. But the mountains of
Afghanistan are dry and cold, and the group became smaller," he
said. After entering Pakistan, he tumbled off the back of a truck
and continued alone to the Iranian-Turkish border.
Housed in an orphanage in Istanbul, the nine-year-old began
practicing kung-fu and taekwondo to defend himself from bullies.
"I had no protection from the boys on the street or in school," he
said. "They didn't like refugees."
After five years in Istanbul, the UN Refugee Agency relocated him to
Portugal, where he was taken in by a non-profit organization in
Lisbon for unaccompanied minors seeking asylum.
"All I knew of Portugal was Cristiano Ronaldo. But I thought I'd go
there and try a new life," he smiled.
He started martial arts again, this time trying boxing. After five
months, he rose to become the national cadet boxing champion, also
winning a Human Rights Prize from Portugal's parliament.
But as a refugee without Portuguese nationality, his career
opportunities were limited.
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Boxer Farid Walizadeh practices during a training session in Lisbon,
Portugal February 19, 2020. Picture taken February 19, 2020.
REUTERS/Rafael Marchante
REFUGEE OLYMPIC TEAM
In 2015, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) created the
world's first Refugee Olympic Team for the Rio 2016 games.
Farid, then 18, was in no condition to compete. He worked nights in
a hotel and studied during the day to achieve his second big dream
in life: becoming an architect.
But Portugal's Olympic Committee had its eye on him, and last March
he received a scholarship from the IOC to train full-time for the
2020 games that begin in July.
Farid's coach Paulo Seco, who has sent various Portuguese boxers to
the Olympics, is blunt about the challenge Farid faces: "This type
of work is never done in 10 months. I've literally got to make him
bleed to show people he can do this."
Farid will compete in a qualifying tournament for European athletes
in London next month in his bid to represent the Refugee Olympic
Team, to be followed by a world tournament in Paris in May.
"I work hard," he said. "I want to show people there's always a
second chance if they want it... That's why I want to go to the
Olympics. If I can do it, they can do it."
(Reporting by Victoria Waldersee; Editing by Andrei Khalip and Hugh
Lawson)
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