Mansour Konte is an 18-year-old young man from Guinea-Conakry who arrived in the Canary Islands by boat and who in Malaga He has become a hero by saving a woman from the water during the DANA. The moment was recorded and, after his feat became famous, He has obtained several job offers and he has also been able to reunite with his rescued person, Cristina.
Around a dozen job proposals have reached him, one of them from León. The offers are analyzed given their asylum seeker status and be included within a reception and social support program with the Spanish Commission for Refugee Assistance (CEAR).
Sources from this entity have explained that Its Career Guidance Service is studying what to advise Mansour. For example, if these are real options and if acceptance could harm you, given that the reception program implies certain conditions.
Acceptance of the position can influence the type of support you receive and it is analyzed whether it would imply his departure from the aforementioned program, in addition to taking into account his youth. However, they point out that Mansour has the last word.
He also studies the offers with other people around him and confesses that He is attracted to going to León, although at the same time he has doubts if he could finally join the job.. For now he lacks the precise documentation, so he believes that first he must “sort the papers.”
want to work
Mansour explains that he has not been working and training for a long time, and that is why the impulse is to go in search of the position. “I’m afraid”, explains, to accept the job and when he leaves his current home he cannot return to it, but at the same time he wants to access the job. He also remembers that they once offered him a job and that they would fix his paperwork, but then it was a “lie.”
Mansour, who did not know the woman he rescued, found her in his neighborhood when she was walking with her mother. Cristina warned her mother that He was “the boy” who helped him, They kindly shook his hand and thanked him for his action.
Days after the feat, a neighbor remembered this Tuesday how Mansour moved containers off the street in full accumulation of water due to the heavy rainfall last Wednesday.
The young man, waiting for his asylum request to be resolved and who arrived in Spain via the ‘Canary route’, considered one of the most dangerous, saw that a woman in her 40s couldn’t finish crossing a wide street of the capital of Malaga, which was flooded with a lot of water and had stopped without being able to move forward.
He quickly entered the wide river into which the three-lane road was transformed, and reached it to extend his hand and together they continued the journey. She, crying, replied that she could not walk, so He chose to pick her up and move her, as she said, to where she could continue on her way. He saw that the situation she was in was “very dangerous” and got her out of there.