Myanmar hosts first marathon in decades

Race aimed to showcase the country as it prepares to host its first Southeast Asian Games in four decades in December.

Myanmar hosts first marathon in decades
Organisers said athletes from China, India as well as Britain, US, Ethiopia and Kenya were competing [AFP]

About a thousand runners streamed through Myanmar’s capital Yangon for the first international marathon in decades, another sign of the dramatic changes sweeping the former army-ruled country.

Gathering before dawn on Sunday in the shadow of the iconic Shwedagon Pagoda, runners flashed victory signs as they pounded the streets of the former colonial capital, the scene of several bloody military crackdowns in the past.

Under a clear blue sky, they snaked past landmarks such as Yangon University – a symbol of the junta-era democratic struggle – and Inya Lake, overlooked by the mansion, where Aung San Suu Kyi was locked up by the generals for years.

“I’m very excited,” 25-year-old Saw Kyaw Soe Oo, from eastern Karen State, told AFP before the runners set off, cheered on by supporters along the route.

“It was impossible to hold such an event in the past era. It wouldn’t have been so easy to let many foreigners into the country,” he said.

‘A great honour’

More than 1,000 participants were registered to take part in the event, which also included short-distance fun runs.

Kenyan runner Gitau Kariuki, 25, was first past the finishing line in the marathon category after two hours, 19 minutes and 10 seconds.

“It has been fantastic… it’s my first time here in Myanmar. I promise to come here next year to defend my title,” said Kariuki, who scooped the prize money of $2,500.

The marathon aimed to showcase Myanmar’s budding sporting credentials as it prepares to host its first Southeast Asian Games in 44 years in December.

Twenty-year old Thaung Aye was the first Myanmar runner to cross the finish line, coming third after two hours, 27 minutes and 10 seconds – a personal best.

Organisers said athletes from China and India as well as those from Britain, the United States, Ethiopia and Kenya were competing.

Since taking power in early 2011, president Thein Sein’s reformist government has overseen dramatic changes including the release of hundreds of political prisoners and Suu Kyi’s election to parliament.

In response, the West has begun rolling back sanctions against the former pariah state and foreign tourists have begun flocking to the long-isolated country.

“For us to be able to showcase Yangon at this juncture of time when our country is undergoing monumental changes politically, economically and socially is a great honour,” said Serge Pun, a business executive and sponsor of the race.

Source: AFP