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Out of Africa, two orphans on road to fulfilling pro dream

LONDON : Elite road cycling remains overwhelmingly white and largely the preserve of riders from wealthy nations so the idea of two orphans from a village in Uganda setting out to make it as pros would appear an unlikely journey.

But Paul Lomuria, 21, and 18-year-old Lawrence Lorot from the village of Jinja, both members of the remarkable 1moreChild Cycling Club, are already on the long and winding road to fulfilling their dreams.

Their earliest cycling memories are of gathering firewood and carrying water on mangled bicycles rescued from scrap heaps.

But over the past week they have been competing in the UCI World Championships in Glasgow, riding the latest carbon-fibre machines and making quite an impression.

Lorot laughs when recalling his early adventures on two wheels. "There were no gears, no brakes, flat tyres, you used your feet to slow down if you were lucky," he told Reuters near the finish line of the junior road race.

While he did not complete the race because of a mechanical issue, he managed seven laps of a formidable city circuit that proved challenging enough even for the best professional riders in the business in Sunday's elite race.

Considering it was his first competition out of Africa, it was a notable achievement and he will have another outing in the junior time trial in Stirling on Saturday.

Lomuria raced in Wednesday's under-23 time trial in which he finished a respectable 60th out of 78 and he will also ride again in Saturday's under-23 road race.

Both say they hope to follow a handful of other African cyclists to reach the WorldTour and one day the Tour de France.

An ambitious target, perhaps, but considering the obstacles they have already overcome, they feel anything is possible.

"You can't just be on

Read more on channelnewsasia.com