By Linda Thom
07/01/2009
Just got my Newsweek and on page 12 is a short piece entitled, "Run to Mexico?" by Alexis Okeowo. It reads in part:
A growing number of international runners are leaving their homelands for an unlikely destination: Mexico … .Though the U.S. still boasts more foreign transplants, Mexico’s high altitude, easier visa process and cheaper cost of living are luring some of the sport’s leading figures, including Kenyans Isaac Kimaiyo, Lazarus Nyakeraka and Patrick Nthiwa. Mexico also taxes race winnings by 14 percent, compared with 33 percent in the U.S., which Nyakeraka says makes it a "better option" for runners who send race earnings to family back home.
But there’s an aspect of Mexican culture that doesn’t get reported much:
Yet even as Mexico tries to package itself as a sporting suburb of the U.S., it’s facing one major drawback: racism. African runners complain of constant taunts from fans upset that the newcomers are beating out homegrown favorites. Coaches have complained to officials, to no avail. Last year Kenyan runners won 85 percent of the country’s domestic long-distance races. But organizers have started limiting the number of prizes that Africans can win, regardless of how well they place. In races abroad, all of Mexico’s runners are equal, but at home, it seems that some are more equal than others.
I was pretty surprised that this story saw the light of day, especially in Newsweek.
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