Refugee achieves Olympics dream
TOKYO — Cyrille Tchatchet is preparing to make history at the Tokyo Olympics — seven years after finding himself homeless and penniless on Britain's streets.
In June, the weightlifter was officially selected for the International Olympic Committee's refugee team in a ceremony co-hosted by IOC president Thomas Bach, making him the first UK- based refugee Olympian. The IOC Refugee Olympic Team first appeared at the 2016 Rio Games.
In Tokyo, Tchatchet II will compete in the 96kg weight class on July 31 as part of a 29-strong contingent of displaced athletes.
‘‘I feel like I was brought back to life. It's a dream come true,’’ he told AFP. ‘‘I'm proud -- it sends a big message of hope and solidarity.’’
"I feel very excited not just to represent myself but about 80 million displaced people around the world. To represent refugees and the under-privileged will be a big responsibility," he added.
The Cameroonian has a first-class degree in mental health nursing and worked on the frontline during Britain's first coronavirus lockdown last March. But his prospects appeared bleak when he first arrived.
The Yaounde-born athlete competed for Cameroon at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow before learning that it was not safe for him to return home for reasons he prefers not to reveal.
He fled the team base with just his backpack, some clothes and weightlifting gear and ended up homeless for two months in Brighton, a city in southern England.
"It was a very difficult experience. I had to escape. I was very young, very scared. I didn't think much about the future," he recalled.
Eking out a miserable existence under a bridge with no money, food or water and suffering from depression, Tchatchet
haunted by suicidal thoughts, had sunk to his lowest ebb.
A call to Samaritans, a charity supporting those in emotional distress, pulled him back from the brink. Police removed him from the streets and an asylum application was submitted.