Haiti's cyclists brave protests and poor roads in race for gold
Members of the Haiti national cycling team ride along a road during a training session near Baud, Brittany, France, October 5, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Ousline Georges, 22, only started to take cycling seriously a year ago, wary of the many hurdles she faced such as the prohibitive cost of a decent bicycle and the treacherous roads in her home country of Haiti, the poorest in the Americas.
This past weekend though, she became the first Haitian ever to win a medal in the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship, thanks to a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)that fosters the sport in small, developing nations.
Members of the Haiti national cycling team ride along a road during a training session in Mure de Bretagen, Brittany, France, September 5, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
"I was really moved," said Georges, a student and mother of a four-year old boy. "When I saw the others cry over my victory, I cried too."
Cycling is not an easy sport to practice in Haiti, a country wracked by poverty, natural catastrophes and political instability.
Bicycles and a good diet are too expensive for most and there are few roads that lend themselves to training given the destruction wrought by the 2010 earthquake and a scarcity of cash to build infrastructure.
Members of the Haiti national cycling team stop for a break with their coach Yann Dejan during a training session near Baud, Brittany, France, October 6, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
The country's main arteries clogged with trucks and buses, along with roadblocks that have been set up as part of the anti-government protests that have paralyzed the country for months now, have made it even more dangerous for cyclists.
Those protests, over corruption and inequality, prevented Haiti from hosting the championship of more than 20 nations this year as originally planned, which would have provided the country an economic and morale boost.
Instead, the race - one step below the Pan American Championship where cyclists can qualify for the Olympics, was moved to neighboring Cuba.
Members of the Haiti national cycling team react as they watch a cycling race on TV in Baud, Brittany, France, October 4, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
Given the poor track record of Haiti's cyclists, they cannot get sponsorship.
However, it appears change is afoot. At the Caribbean Cycling Road Championship held on November 3 in Havana, Haiti's national team put in their best performance ever.
Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given equipment and a French coach, Yann Dejan, as well as a month's training in Brittany, France. Dejan also created a female national team to complement the men's.
Members of the Haiti national cycling team are spoken to by their coach Yann Dejan in Baud, Brittany, France, September 6, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
As a result, some of Haiti's cyclists finished the circuit for the first time ever. According to Dejan, they had always been eliminated before arriving at the end because they lagged too far behind the pack.
Georges won the bronze medal in the under 23 category. She reckons she could have won gold if she could have had the full training originally planned.
Administrative delay for visas and other difficulties due to Haiti's general disarray meant the training was reduced from five months to two for the men and one for the women, according to Dejan.
Members of the Haiti national cycling team Ousline Georges (C), 22, and Medgine Staco, 19, react to teammates approaching the finish line at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 3, 2019. Georges, a high school student and mother of a four-year old boy was the first Haitian ever to win a medal in the Caribbean cycling championship. "I was really moved," She said. "When I saw the others cry over my victory, I cried too. The girls lifted me up, the boys too," she added. "I hope to go further with cycling, I wish the Haitian federation and sport ministry would keep us training." REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
"I hope to go further with cycling, I wish the Haitian Federation and sport ministry would keep us training," said Georges.
Cycling is still very niche in Haiti; the Haitian Federation of Cycling (FHC) now has 360 cyclists. Football is the most popular sport on the island and the discipline in which Haitians have shone most internationally to date.
But Dejan reckons Haitians have proven they have the physical qualities and talent to shine with the right training and support. And once they shine, they can get sponsorships.
Yann Dejan, a coach on the Haiti national cycling team, counts the push-ups of a preselected cyclist who arrived late to a meeting ahead of a training session at the Olympic's Sport for Hope Centre in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 18, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares
The UCI will continue to support Haitian cycling for the time being, he said. It hopes for example to distribute bicycles in schools and youth clubs, once the political situation has calmed down.
Dejan, who has trained cyclists from all over the world, said cycling tournaments had proven very popular in poor nations because they offered a free outdoor spectacle. Haiti was applying to host the Caribbean Championships in 2021, he said.
"Cycling could be a way of giving the Haitian people back their smiles," he said.
Cyclists get ready to compete at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 3, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
See related photo essay here - https://widerimage.reuters.com/story/haitis-cyclists-brave-protests-and-poor-roads-in-race-for-gold
Jean Willy Joseph, 43, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, rides his bicycle along a street in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 23, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares
(Reporting by Andres Martinez Casares and Andre Paultre in Haiti, Alexandre Meneghini and Sarah Marsh in Havana, Gonzalo Fuentes in Brittany, France; Editing by Diane Craft)
Shawel Lafontant, 22, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, cycles past a crashed bus during a training session in Bois D'Orme outside of Port au Prince, Haiti, July 18, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Preselected cyclists for the Haiti national cycling team train at the Olympic's Sport for Hope Centre in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 15, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Odvelt Clerge (C), 19, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, takes part in an aerobic workout in Baud, Brittany, France, October 4, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes A commuter traveling in a Haitian transportation vehicle called a 'tap-tap' looks at members of the Haiti national cycling team riding amongst traffic during a training session in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 27, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti national cycling team Jean Willy Joseph (L), 43, Sony Saintil (C), 30, and Shawel Lafontant, 22, watch a video on a phone as they rest in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 8, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti National Cycling Team sleep on the roof of Sony Saintil's house in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 3, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti national cycling team have lunch at a street restaurant in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 30, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti national cycling team Jameson Augustin, (L), 27, and Odvelt Clerge, 19, playfight while Herode Isaac, 24, watches on after sleeping on top of the roof of Sony Saintil's house, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 3, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Jean Willy Joseph, 43, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, says goodbye to one of his sons in Leogane, Haiti, July 23, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Trophies and medals awarded to Jean Willy Joseph, 43, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, are displayed at his house in Leogane, Haiti July 23, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Odvelt Clerge, 19, a member of the Haiti national cycling team chats with Luca, a neighbor who lived next door to the house where the team were staying in, during a break after a training season in Baud, Brittany, France, September 4, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes Jean Paul Toussaint, a mechanic, changes the wheel of a bicycle for a preselected cyclist ahead of a training session at the Olympic's Sport for Hope Centre in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 18, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti national cycling team sit down for meal after a training session in Baud, Brittany, France, September 4, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes Members of the Haiti national cycling team Jean Willy Joseph (L), 43, and Sony Saintil (R), 30, go grocery shopping with their coach Yann Dejan in Baud, Brittany, France, September 5, 2019. The team gathered in France as part of a new program created by the Union Cycliste Internationale to foster the sport in small, developing nations. Under the program, Haitian cyclists were given French coach, Yann Dejan, equipment and a month's training in Brittany, France to prepare for the Caribbean Road Cycling Championship. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes Medgine Staco, 19, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, falls off her bike during the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 3, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Odvelt Clerge, 19, a member of the Haiti national cycling team is followed by his coach Yann Dejan in his car as he competes during the individual time trial at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 2, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Yolanda Miraccin, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, takes a break during a training session in a field on the outskirts of Leogane, Haiti, August 7, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Yolanda Miraccin a member of the Haiti national cycling team, rests at her house after a training session, on the outskirts of Leogane, Haiti, August 7, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Members of the Haiti national cycling team transport their bicycles on the roof of a car as they make their way to the airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, October 30, 2019. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares Odvelt Clerge, 19, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, competes in the individual time trial at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 2, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Ousline Georges, 22, a member of the Haiti national cycling team, jumps down from the podium after receiving a bronze medal for the individual time trial under 23 category at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 2, 2019. Georges, a university student and mother of a four-year old boy was the first Haitian ever to win a medal in the Caribbean cycling championship. "I was really moved," She said. "When I saw the others cry over my victory, I cried too. The girls lifted me up, the boys too," she added. "I hope to go further with cycling, I wish the Haitian federation and sport ministry would keep us training." REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini A man wears a t-shirt with an image of late revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara during the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 2, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Ousline Georges, 22, a member of the Haiti national cycling team is kissed by her coach Yann Dejan after receiving a bronze medal for the individual time trial under 23 category at the Caribbean Cycling Championship in Havana, Cuba, November 2, 2019. Georges, a university school student and mother of a four-year old boy was the first Haitian ever to win a medal in the Caribbean cycling championship. "I was really moved," She said. "When I saw the others cry over my victory, I cried too. The girls lifted me up, the boys too," she added. "I hope to go further with cycling, I wish the Haitian federation and sport ministry would keep us training." REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Members of the Haiti national cycling team take a break from a training session in front of a vintage car with tourists in Havana, Cuba, November 1, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini Members of the Haiti national cycling team ride past a building with an image of late revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara during a training session in Havana, Cuba, November 1, 2019. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
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