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Zaid Ait Malek: The stowaway who became a Spanish ultra running star


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As midnight approached on 31 December 2006, most of Spain was preparing to celebrate the new year. Zaid Ait Malek spent the night evading police.

He and his cousin had just completed a five-hour ferry crossing from Morocco hidden inside a truck. They'd avoided detection but now, having set foot on European soil for the first time, their luck looked spent.

Since his childhood in the wilderness of the Atlas mountains, Ait Malek had been a strong runner. On that night in December 2006, his athletic ability would make the difference between capture and escape.

Later it would open up a whole new world - and help spare him deportation from the country he now calls home.

Ait Malek's family are nomadic Berber shepherds mostly based close to the village of Oudadi, about 350km (218 miles) inland from Rabat. They lived in a jaima - a large cloth tent - and every few weeks they would move for their goats to graze.

Born in a jaima in 1984, Ait Malek was the youngest of six siblings and the only one who went to school, but when he reached 18 he had to earn money for the family.

He began working at construction sites along Morocco's Atlantic coast, earning about 500 euros (£430) a month. In 2006, he started to look towards Europe.

That year, about 40,000 irregular migrants were detected trying to gain entry to Spain. Ait Malek, his brother Said and cousin Mohamed - all economic migrants - would be among the final few making up that total.

Said and Mohamed worked in construction too, but spent much of their spare time monitoring the port of Tangier, working out the best way to sneak aboard one of the boats leaving for Spain. On New Year's Eve, Mohamed convinced Ait Malek to join him at the port entrance.

Nothing had been planned, but when a taxi parked in front of a truck Mohamed suddenly disappeared. Moments later Ait Malek heard him shouting from underneath the truck: "Run, there's room. If we don't leave now we'll never be able to cross."

Ait Malek ran. Holding on to cables underneath the truck, they moved into the port and on to the ferry. They knew the risk they were taking. On a previous attempt, Said had been caught and badly beaten before being released.

Once aboard, Ait Malek and his cousin went in search of a cloth-sided truck in which to hide. For five hours, with no food or water, they crouched inside a concealed space they built from wooden pallets.

When the ferry arrived in Spain, and the truck drove off onto Spanish soil, the police pulled it to one side. The cargo was opened. The cousins' hearts were racing as torches shone directly on to the pallets.

They weren't spotted. They'd made it.

The truck was then stationary for two hours before Ait Malek and Mohamed dared to creep out. They spotted a sign for Malaga and started walking along the highway.

After about 10km they took shelter in an underpass. It was cold and dark, and they huddled together to try to get some sleep. As dawn broke, they started walking again.

A car coming from the opposite direction slowed on its approach and started flashing its lights. Ait Malek went towards it, thinking the occupants must be offering help. They were police officers.

In a moment of panic, he darted across the highway. Mohamed was apprehended trying to scramble away through bushes.

Ait Malek hid. Crouching, still, at the foot of a tree, he watched the police car now containing his cousin drive to the other side of the road, towards him. He made his move. Scaling a fence that separated the two lanes, he ran and just kept running. Mohamed and the policemen were laughing; they all thought it was ridiculous to even try. But he got away.

Now he was alone, with nobody to call for help, and he didn't know a word of Spanish. Thanks to three chance encounters, he worked his way up the Andalusian coast.

First, an Arabic voice called to him as he reached a service station. It was a Moroccan woman who ran the service station with her Spanish husband. They gave him food and water.

Shortly afterwards, a car of Moroccans pulled up. They drove him to their home in nearby Estepona, let him take a shower, gave him some clothes and invited him to stay longer with family further up the coast in Almeria.

Then, a few days later, when calling home from a public telephone, he heard a familiar accent from another booth. It belonged to a man from his neighbouring village, now working on a farm that needed extra staff.

Ait Malek said goodbye to his hosts, thanked them for their hospitality and set off. His new life was waiting.

Ait Malek shares family shots from visits back to Oudadi on his Instagram

For almost three years, Ait Malek lived in a farmhouse on the outskirts of Almeria, next to the greenhouses where he worked.

It was hard labour, picking tomatoes and watermelons, and maintaining greenhouses in the Andalusian heat for long hours. At times, he wondered whether he was any better off.

"When I was suffering, I seriously thought about packing up and going home. But once I had crossed, there was no going back," Ait Malek says.

"People pay a lot of money to cross or spend years trying. I crossed the first time and was having opportunities. I had to take advantage of it."

In 2010, he and a friend took up a job picking olives in Baena, 270km inland in the province of Cordoba. It was there that Spain finally began to feel like home.

He began taking Spanish lessons, played football with the locals and started running, through which he met members of the local athletics club - Media Legua Baena.

"From the moment we met him, Zaid stood out as a calm and thoughtful guy who valued every opportunity," says club president Jesus Morales. "He was also a fast runner with very good physical endurance."

Ait Malek shared an apartment with colleagues but when they left after the olive season finished, he chose to stay.

Initially, he slept in temporary shelter provided by Baena's Red Cross branch, before Media Legua members helped to secure and furnish his own apartment. They also helped him enter local races by providing equipment and covering registration fees and travel expenses.

"The club helped in everything he needed, to show that he was one of the Media Legua family," adds Morales.

Ait Malek began winning prize money from local road races, supplementing his income from olive picking. Media Legua then helped him secure an athlete scholarship with the local council and, crucially, a residence permit in 2012.

He helped to train local children at the club with Carlos Chamorro, who suggested Ait Malek tried mountain running. That helped him "remember my childhood, that the mountain was my world".

Ait Malek was a natural. Soon Chamorro had another race in mind for his new friend.

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