In 1991, at just 24 years old, Ffyona Campbell set out on a journey that would test the limits of human endurance. She walked 16,000 kilometers across Africa—from Cape Town to Tangiers—alone. Facing scorching deserts, wild animals, illness, and political unrest, she pushed forward with relentless determination, averaging 25 miles a day for nearly two years. By 1993, she became the first woman to walk the length of Africa solo. Her journey wasn’t just about distance—it was about courage, resilience, and the power of one woman’s will to defy fear and rewrite what was possible. Today, her footsteps still echo across the continent she crossed on her own two feet. BBC News
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