A103-year-old Belgian doctor is walking a marathon around his garden in daily stages to raise money for research into the new coronavirus. He was inspired by a centenarian who became a hero in Britain for clocking up the charity miles with a walking frame.

belgian man
So far he has raised just over 6,000 euros (Rs 5,16,600), according to Marlies Vanderbruggen of Leuven University, and has covered about one third of the distance of a marathon.Reuters

Alfons Leempoels, a retired general practitioner, started his 42.2 km (26.2 miles) journey in the municipality of Rotselaar, north-east of Brussels, on June 1 and plans to complete it on June 30.

Every day he walks 10 laps of 145 metres (159 yards); three in the morning, three at noon and four in the evening. To avoid losing count, he throws a stick into a bowl every time he completes a lap.

Leempoels said the idea came to him when he saw World War Two veteran Tom Moore, 100, strike a chord in Britain by raising the equivalent of more than USD 40 million (Rs 3,03,22,00,000) for the country's health service by walking around his garden.

"My children said that I can walk at least as well as Tom Moore and on top of that I am 103 years old," he told Reuters.

"So they suggested that maybe I should do something. My granddaughter had just run a marathon and as a joke I said: I will run a marathon." Leempoels hopes to raise funds for the hospital attached to the nearby university of Leuven, where researchers are working to find a cure for Covid-19.

So far he has raised just over 6,000 euros (Rs 5,16,600), according to Marlies Vanderbruggen of Leuven University, and has covered about one third of the distance of a marathon.

Leempoels recalls people falling sick during the 1957-58 Asian flu pandemic, but recovering much more quickly than those affected by the novel coronavirus in recent months.

"As a doctor you feel touched by this and that's why I was happy now that I might be able to contribute something to fight the coronavirus," he said.