Born in 1991 with significant disabilities in all four limbs, Ahmed Kelly was left at a Baghdad Orphanage where he spent the majority of the first seven years of his life. Then in 1998, he met Moira Kelly from the Children’s First Foundation, who brought Ahmed and his brother Emmanuel, also born with limb deficiencies, to Australia for medical treatment.
Once in Australia, Ahmed and Emmanuel began to live happy, fulfilling lives, pursuing their passions with gusto. After undergoing surgery to remove the deformed sections of his lower legs, Ahmed learned to walk with the use of prostheses, and before long, he began to run. His inspiring recovery soon led him to his firsts porting love, Aussie Rules Football. He joined his local team in Kilmore, Victoria, and quickly earned the nickname Nails because of his “hard as nails” style of play. His toughness, skill and determination helped him progress rapidly as a footballer, but when the sport eventually began to take its toll on his body, Ahmed turned his attention to swimming in 2008 and he has not looked back since.
After competing at his first international competition, the 2009 Oceania Paralympic Championships in Darwin, Ahmed has gone on to claim back‐to‐back 100mbreaststroke crowns at the Australian Championships(2010 and 2011), with both victories coming in world record time. He was then among the favourites for gold in his events at the 2012 Paralympic Games in London. Ahmed has been coached by Brad Harris under the Melbourne Vicentre Swimming Club since 2009.
At the 2012 Paralympic games, Moira Kelly, Ahmed’s adoptive mother, boomed "Aussie, Aussie, Aussie. Oi, Oi, Oi" from the stands alongside Ahmed's brother, Emmanuel, as her son finished fourth in his 50m breaststroke final at the Paralympics in London. "He's got a smile on his face as big as Australia," she said. But his own excitement was dwarfed by his mum's, leading the Team Kelly cries from the grandstands. "I was draped in the