Ugandan runner due to arrive in London after 516 days and 7,700 miles on the road
Deo Kato says journey from Cape Town gave him hope in humanity, despite facing racism from police and passersby on a daily basis
Hasnain says:
"Another low point arrived more than 5,000 miles later when Kato experienced the racism other Africans have faced in Europe.
“The other time I felt like packing it in was in Croatia because I genuinely felt treated as an illegal immigrant. I didn’t feel welcomed or that I belonged in their society.
“The police stopped me at least four times a day. Sometimes, I caught locals taking photos of me and reporting me to the police,” he said.
“This experience, coupled with everything I was processing from my journey in Africa and other personal challenges, made it intensely difficult to keep moving forward.”
Kato wanted his journey to draw attention to the earliest migration of humans from Africa and challenge the racist notion that people should “go back to where they come from”. Viewed as a whole, he said the run had underlined the positive aspects of migration and its potential to “create a more culturally connected and enriched global society”."
Posted on 2024-12-29T22:45:48+0000