Daily Press

‘I knew I was in trouble’

Olympic champ Farah reveals he was trafficked to UK as child

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — Olympic great Mo Farah — the winner of four gold medals and one of Britain’s greatest and best-loved athletes — has been carrying a secret burden all these years: He was illegally brought to the U.K. as a youth and forced to care for other children before he escaped a life of servitude through running.

In a new documentar­y, Farah says his real name is Hussein Abdi Kahin and that he was from taken from the East African nation of Djibouti when he was about 8 or 9. He says a woman he didn’t know brought him to Britain using fake travel documents that included his picture alongside the name Mohammed Farah.

The revelation­s come as Britain struggles to deal with a surge of people fleeing conflict and hunger in Africa, the Middle East and Asia on flimsy boats organized by human trafficker­s who assist the desperate to cross the English Channel. Criminal gangs are also smuggling people into the country and forcing them into sex work, criminal activities and unpaid labor.

In the documentar­y, produced by the BBC and Red Bull Studios, Farah said he thought he was going to Europe to live with relatives and had piece of paper with the contact details.

“The lady took it off me and right in front of me ripped them up and put it in the bin,” Farah said in the film, to be broadcast Wednesday. “And at that moment I knew I was in trouble.”

The woman took him to an apartment in west London where he was forced to care for her children, Farah said. He wasn’t allowed to go to school until he was 12.

“I wasn’t treated as part of the family,” Farah said. “If I wanted food in my mouth, my job was to look after those kids — shower them, cook for them, clean for them.”

Farah was granted U.K. citizenshi­p in 2000 and represente­d Britain at three straight Summer Olympics starting in 2008. He captured hearts in Britain and elsewhere with the look of joy and astonishme­nt after his triumph in the 5,000 meters at the 2012 London Games after earlier winning the 10,000-meter title. He won the same races at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro.

He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2017.

Farah previously said he had moved to Britain with his parents as a refugee from Somalia. But in the documentar­y, he says his parents never were in the U.K. His father was killed by gunfire during unrest in Somalia when Farah was 4, according to the film. His mother and two brothers live on the family farm in Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia that is not internatio­nally recognized.

Farah says his fortunes changed when he was finally allowed to attend school. A teacher who was interviewe­d for the documentar­y recalled a 12-year-old boy who appeared “unkempt and uncared for,” was “emotionall­y and culturally alienated” and spoke little English.

But he began to blossom on the track and eventually told his story to a physical education instructor. The teacher contacted local officials, who arranged for a Somali family to take him in as a foster child.

“I still missed my real family, but from that moment everything got better,” Farah said. “I felt like a lot of stuff was lifted off my shoulders, and I felt like me.”

Farah said he had feared he would be deported if he spoke about his childhood experience­s. He decided to tell his story to publicize and challenge people’s perception­s of human traffickin­g, he said.

“I had no idea there was so many people who are going through exactly the same thing that I did,” he said. “It just shows how lucky I was.”

In 2020, more than 10,000 people were referred to authoritie­s in Britain as potential victims of modern slavery, up from 2,340 in 2014, according to the Home Office, the government agency responsibl­e for border enforcemen­t.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s are also under pressure as the number of people entering the country on small boats jumped to 28,526 last year from 299 in 2018, government statistics show.

The U.K. has struck a deal with Rwanda to send some asylum seekers on a one way voyage to the East African nation, where they would be able to apply for asylum. While Prime Minister Boris Johnson says this will break the business model of the criminal gangs who charge migrants thousands of pounds to cross the Channel, immigratio­n rights groups say it’s illegal and inhumane.

But modern slavery doesn’t only affect migrants. Nongovernm­ental organizati­ons are at pains to insist that victims of modern slavery are forced into servitude bound by coercion and violence rather than shackles. Such organizati­ons have often found it difficult to put a human face on the crime, fearing that exposure will inflict further trauma. That alone makes Farah’s case unique.

Justine Carter of Unseen, a charity that deals with victims of modern slavery, stresses that it takes courage to overcome such conditions. Farah’s revelation will let people around the world know that modern slavery can happen anywhere.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES FILE ?? Four-time Olympic gold medalist Mo Farah says in a new documentar­y that he was illegally brought to the U.K. as a child.
NEW YORK TIMES FILE Four-time Olympic gold medalist Mo Farah says in a new documentar­y that he was illegally brought to the U.K. as a child.

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