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Mo Farah people trafficked into the UK.

(45 Posts)
Doodledog Tue 12-Jul-22 15:14:12

Thanks, Iam. I suppose I was wondering whether he would be treated as an 'illegal' immigrant.

DillytheGardener Tue 12-Jul-22 15:08:12

Awful Dickensian story. I had a peak at the Daily Mail comments to see if readers had any compassion for him, and there was down voting in the hundreds for any posters sympathetic to his story. Others pointing out he’d lied and should be deported. Very sad that there are people about with so little heart.

Iam64 Tue 12-Jul-22 15:04:25

There would be an investigation which would include police because of modern slavery laws
If the child/young person had a school friend whose family offered him a home that would need assessment. An emergency placement there could be arranged speedily. Like in that afternoon, police and sw record checks, discussion with school about their views. He could be sitting down for his evening meal, doing his homework that evening. The key would be ensuring he couldn’t be taken by his previous ‘family’

More thorough assessment would follow. How lucky though to have a placement that met his needs so well

Doodledog Tue 12-Jul-22 14:53:38

If something like that happened now, and a teacher reported it to a social worker (or social services in general) would he be fostered?

Iam64 Tue 12-Jul-22 14:47:12

Great story isn’t it madmum
It reminded me of Alan Johnson, best labour leader we never had. A teacher and social worker are credited by him as helping. His mum died when he was 15. The social worker campaigned with managers to get agreement Alan could stay with his sister, I think she was 17

mokryna Tue 12-Jul-22 14:44:10

Thank you Mo for telling your story. It must be a big burden off your shoulders.

It makes me think of all the other refugees who haven’t been allowed to show there worth.
One example on a TV program a man was working as a porter, during covid in a London hospital, he was a doctor in his own country.

mumofmadboys Tue 12-Jul-22 14:32:48

Sorry - crossed posts!

mumofmadboys Tue 12-Jul-22 14:32:19

I read the article. He confided in his PE teacher who involved social workers and he was fostered into a Somali family.

Iam64 Tue 12-Jul-22 14:30:49

Thank you Mo Farah for sharing your story. Thanks to the teacher and the social worker who was involved in his placement in the family of a school friend
What an athlete and remarkable man. I
Hope those Conservative leadership hopefuls who have been sharing their own immigrant stories feel some shame for their continued support of Rwanda

Glorianny Tue 12-Jul-22 13:47:25

How brave and what an extraordinary story. It makes his success even more remarkable.

Yammy Tue 12-Jul-22 13:46:36

I greatly respect Mo Farah and am so pleased he has been reunited with his family.
I agree with other posters about people coming into our country and making it difficult for others. They should show empathy and remember what it was like for their family.

toscalily Tue 12-Jul-22 13:40:27

I have the utmost respect for Mo Farah and think he has been very brave in telling his story. Can you imagine that poor little boy and his life, thank goodness he was able to discover the sport he has excelled in.

On a sour note I have just heard Richi Sunack's video/soundtrack played on the radio and it made me cringe. It was like a promotion for a really bad daytime soap opera

welbeck Tue 12-Jul-22 13:32:56

it's a well-known phenomenon, unfortunately, called pulling up the drawbridge/loft ladder behind them.
some are different, eg lord alf dubs.

HousePlantQueen Tue 12-Jul-22 13:26:15

Very brave. I am saddened and sickened by the number of candidates for Tory party leadership/PM who have been welcomed by the UK, whose families have been given access to education, health, housing, who have made a success of their lives and now wish to deny this opportunity to others.

LizzieDrip Tue 12-Jul-22 13:17:14

Well done Mo - very brave! Richi Sunak’s slick leadership campaign video starts with his ‘story’. How his mother came to this country as a young girl with ‘very little’, worked hard, made something of her life etc. I hope the irony of this is not lost on people. She may well have been sent to Rwanda today. Mo Farrah’s story holds a mirror up to the government’s cruel deportation of innocent people.

TopsyIrene06 Tue 12-Jul-22 12:35:36

I sincerely hope that his story will have an impact on the current government and it's supporters with their cruel policy on Rwanda.

J52 Tue 12-Jul-22 12:25:00

He has been extremely brave, both now and in the past. It really does illustrate that we don’t know what goes on in people’s lives and we shouldn’t ‘judge books by their covers’.
He has my utmost respect. ( should he want it!)

Dee1012 Tue 12-Jul-22 12:24:56

Given the current climate around migrants, I sincerely hope his voice impacts on the views some people hold, it really shouldn't take one of the greatest athletes who have ever raced for this country to humanise others...

MayBee70 Tue 12-Jul-22 12:17:50

I’m in awe of him. How brave!

GagaJo Tue 12-Jul-22 12:14:25

This made me cry. Would he have been treated so kindly if he wasn't an olympic athlete?

Sir Mo Farah has revealed that he was trafficked into the UK illegally under the name of another child and was forced to work as a domestic servant.

The four-time Olympic champion makes the revelations in a new BBC documentary, saying “the truth is I’m not who you think I am”.

The father-of-four said that he needs to tell his real story “whatever the cost” in the documentary titled The Real Mo Farah.

“Most people know me as Mo Farah but it’s not my name or it’s not the reality,” he says.

“The real story is I was born in Somaliland, north of Somalia, as Hussein Abdi Kahin. Despite what I’ve said in the past, my parents never lived in the UK.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/sir-mo-farah-reveals-he-was-trafficked-to-the-uk-as-a-child-im-not-who-you-think-i-am_uk_62cd15cfe4b06e3d9bb9b1eb