Covering 22,000 km in 2 years, Kerala cyclist reaches Paris to cheer for Neeraj Chopra
The Hindu
India’s star athlete Neeraj Chopra will have a special supporter at the Paris Olympics: a Kerala cyclist who has travelled all the way from Kozhikode, riding more than 22,000 km over two years. Fayis Asraf Ali’s arrival in the French capital was the culmination of a long journey on his Surly bicycle that took him across 30 countries, beginning August 15, 2022.
India’s star athlete Neeraj Chopra will have a special supporter at the Paris Olympics: a Kerala cyclist who has travelled all the way from Kozhikode, riding more than 22,000 km over two years.
Fayis Asraf Ali’s arrival in the French capital was the culmination of a long journey on his Surly bicycle that took him across 30 countries, beginning August 15, 2022.
Ali set off with a mission to cycle from “India to London to spread peace and unity”.
Having cycled across 17 countries, he stopped in Budapest one August afternoon last year, when he came to know that the Tokyo Olympics gold medallist was staying across the street. The ace javelin thrower was with the athletics contingent for the World Championships, in which he claimed another historic win.
A few hurried calls to a “known Kerala coach” led to a “dream meeting” with his sporting idol. “I got a few minutes to talk to the Indian athletes and Neeraj told me since ’you are going to London why don’t you come to Paris for the Olympics’,” Ali told PTI during an interaction after ending his journey at India House here on Sunday.
“I thought it would be a wonderful opportunity to see him again in Paris, so I altered my plan a bit and procured the required visa and cycled to the U.K. before ending my journey here.
“I am so excited to meet him again. I’ve requested P.T. Usha ma’am [IOA chief]. I’m here to see him create history again. We will cheer for him [on August 8],” he added.
Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot has sought a report from the State government on a complaint that the Mysuru Urban Development Authority (MUDA) had taken up works amounting to ₹387 crore in violation of rules in Varuna and Srirangapatna Assembly constituencies, allegedly on Chief Minister Siddaramaiah’s oral instructions.
“We are organising a health research convention, which comprises a couple of workshops, community-based learning, and also cardiac care. We also included a one-day seminar on medical education, how medical education has evolved in India and the U.K., and what we can learn from each other” said Dr. Piruthivi Sukumar Dean of the International Faculty of Medicine & Health, University of Leeds during his interaction with The Hindu.