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==Other work== {{BLP unreferenced section|date=February 2019}} She was appointed an honorary [[United Nations]] [[youth ambassador]] in 2003 at a ceremony in Maputo, in recognition of her outstanding athletic achievements. Other youth ambassadors are musician [[Baaba Maal]] and basketball star [[Dikembe Mutombo]]. She cited the importance of raising awareness of HIV/AIDS issues amongst young people in Africa and also highlighted the benefits that sport can bring to young people. Indeed, her Lurdes Mutola Foundation aims to bring more young Mozambicans to sport and to assist in helping them achieve their sporting and educational potential. Other initiatives that Mutola and her Foundation have been involved in include a Ministry of Health / [[UNICEF]] immunisation campaign against [[measles]] and [[polio]] and housing development initiatives in Maputo. Even before the establishment of the Foundation, she had played an active role in supporting sport in Maputo. She gave financial support that allowed an artificial track to be constructed on the sports ground at which she had originally trained as a fifteen-year-old. She also authorised the sale of T-shirts that featured her image, profits from which went towards helping the Grupo Desportivo de Maputo out of financial difficulty. At the 2006 Winter Olympics she was one of the eight Olympic flag bearers at the [[2006 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony#Words and Symbols|Opening Ceremony]]. After retiring from athletics she returned to her first sporting love, football. She played for Mamelodi Sundowns team in the South African women's league. In 2011, she was captain of the [[Mozambique women's national football team]] at the All-Africa Games in Maputo. In 2012, she coached South African runner [[Caster Semenya]] to a silver medal at the Olympic Games in London.
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