- 28 May 2018
Media captionMalian
'spiderman' rescues Paris child - then meets French President.
A Malian migrant, hailed as a
hero after mounting a daring rescue to save a small boy dangling from a balcony
in Paris, is to be made a French citizen.
Mamoudou Gassama won
widespread praise after climbing the outside of the building to save the
four-year-old.
Video showed him
being cheered on by spectators as he pulled himself from balcony to balcony to the fourth floor.
After meeting him at the
Elysee Palace, President Emmanuel Macron said he would be made a naturalised
citizen.
He personally thanked Mr
Gassama, gave him a medal for courage and said he would also be offered a role
in the fire service.
Mr Gassama is said to have
arrived in France last year, taking the long and dangerous journey to Europe
via a boat over the Mediterranean to Italy.
The drama that thrust him to
fame unfolded on Saturday evening on a street in the north of the city.
Mr Gassama said he had been
walking past when he saw a crowd gathered in front of the building.
He told Mr Macron: "I
just didn't have time to think, I ran across the road to go and save him.
"I just climbed up and thank God, God helped me. The more I climbed the more
I had the courage to climb up higher, that's it," he added.
He said that the boy was
crying when he hauled him to safety and had also suffered an injured foot.
Firefighters arrived to find
the child had already been rescued.
Mr Gassama met French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday owed off a
certificate he was given
Local authorities quoted by French media said the boy's parents were not at home at the time.
The father has been questioned
by police on suspicion of leaving his child unattended, judicial sources say.
The mother was not in Paris at the time, it is believed.
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo was
among those to praise the 22-year-old's heroism and said she had called him to
thank him.
She referred to him as the
"Spiderman of the 18th", referring to the Paris district where the rescue
took place, calling him an "example for all citizens".
France's new Malian hero
Alex Duval Smith, West Africa correspondent, BBC News
Mr Gassama's four-storey dash
is a reminder of another Malian hero who gained national prominence in January
2015 during an extremist attack on a Jewish supermarket in Paris.
A young Malian employee,
Lassana Bathily, was credited with saving the lives of six hostages including a
baby when he led them to a safe hiding place, escaped, then directed gendarmes
to their rescue.
Two weeks later - after six
years of struggling to secure legal residency in France - Mr Bathily was given
a medal and a French passport by then President François Hollande.
In 2016, he wrote a book ''Je
ne suis pas un heros'' (I am no hero) and created a charity whose first project
was to provide irrigation for his home village in western Mali.
Like Mr Bathily's selfless
leadership to save the hostages, Mr Gassama's heroic climb to save the boy
cements the image of Mali as a country with a culture of old-fashioned public
spiritedness.
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