Mira Rai

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2016: among the world's leading ultra-runners

The Times of India Jan 02 2016

Kathmandu

AFP

As a child soldier with Nepal's Maoists, Mira Rai learned to fire guns, disarm opponents and race down trails, little imagining her guerrilla drills would help make her one of the world's top ultra runners.

“It is like a dream, beyond anything I ever imagined. I was just a girl from a village,“ Rai told AFP.

The daughter of a poor Nepali farmer, Rai was only 14 when she ran away from home to fight alongside Maoist rebels seeking to overthrow the government.

“In our society, girls are supposed to behave in a certain way . I didn't want to be confined by that,“ said Rai, now aged 26.

She chafed at the rules she was expected to obey as a teenage girl living in a patriarchal country and the Maoist call for revolution resonated with her. “The Maoists gave opportunities to women, they treated us equally. I saw that women could fight like men, be brave. I built up my confidence there,“ Rai said.

She practised firearm drills and competed with other cadres in running contests designed to build endurance. “I did very well, I even used to outrun the boys,“ she recalled.

Today , Rai ranks among the world's leading ultra runners after a record-breaking win in the 80-kilometre (50-mile) Mont Blanc race in Chamonix, France, last June, when she beat her nearest rival by 22 minutes.

But when the decade-long insurgency ended in 2006, Rai, like many Maoist foot soldiers, was left with little in the way of cash or career prospects.

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