Paris 'Spiderman' tells heartbreaking story of refugee life

Mamoudou Gassama arrived in France last year, after braving Libyan gangs and making the long and dangerous journey to Europe via a boat over the Mediterranean Sea.

Mamoudou Gassama leaves the presidential Elysee Palace after meeting with the French President in Paris.

Mamoudou Gassama leaves the presidential Elysee Palace after meeting with the French President in Paris. Source: Getty Images

Mamoudou Gassama, the young Malian hailed as a hero in France for scaling a multi-storey building to rescue a child hanging from a balcony, is no stranger to danger.

The 22-year-old "Spiderman", who was honoured by President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace and offered French citizenship, braved the Sahara Desert, Libyan gangs and the Mediterranean Sea during his long odyssey to Europe.

In 2013, the shy youth from the southwestern Malian town of Yaguine hit the migrant trail which claims thousands of lives each year.

"I had no means to live and no-one to help me", Gassama, who followed an older brother to France, explained to Macron.

Mamoudou Gassama
Mamoudou Gassama was awarded a certificate of courage and dedication signed by Paris Police Prefect Michel Delpuech. Source: Getty Images


He travelled through Burkina Faso and Niger north to Libya, the main launching pad for clandestine crossings to Europe.

He spent a year working in Libya, where armed gangs prey on migrants, routinely kidnapping them for ransom and even sometimes enslaving them.

"I suffered a lot," he said. "We were caught and beaten but I did not lose hope."

A year later, he sailed to Italy in one of the packed migrant boats that regularly sink.

"It was terrible. There were a lot of people," he told France's BFM news channel.

Mamoudou Gassama
Mamoudou Gassama inside the townhall of Montreuil, eastern Paris suburb. Source: Getty Images


From there he continued on last year to France, where he joined relatives in the eastern Paris suburb of Montreuil, nicknamed "Little Bamako" after its large Malian population.

His home, which he shares with relatives, is a cramped 15-square-metre room in a migrant workers' hostel, with a mattress on the floor for a bed. 

Gassama, who did not seek asylum in France, making him an economic migrant at risk of deportation, has been doing odd jobs in construction.

But his life changed dramatically Saturday, when he came to the rescue of a four-year-old boy who was spotted dangling from a balcony on the fourth-floor of a building in northern Paris.

"I did not think twice," Gassama, who happened to be walking by, told Macron, adding "I went straight up."



An example for millions

The video of him pulling himself up from balcony to balcony with supreme ease has been viewed millions of times on social media, propelling him to stardom.




On Monday morning he was ferried to the Elysee Palace for an audience with the president, who listened smiling to his account of the rescue and presented him with a medal for his bravery.

"I'm pleased because it's the first time I've received a trophy like that," Gassama said afterwards.

"We proud of him," his older brother Birama, 54, told AFP, describing his sibling, a keen footballer, as someone who "likes to help others".

Mamoudou Gassama
Mr Gassama poses with passers by for a photo. Source: Getty Images


Not only will Gassama receive a French passport, Macron offered the plucky youth with preternatural agility a job with the fire service.

"You have become an example because millions of people have seen you. It is only right that the nation be grateful," Macron told him.

In a statement the fire department said Gassama embodied the values of the service, adding: "We are ready to welcome him on board!"


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Source: AFP, SBS

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