The 30-year-old - who hasn't seen his family in three years - says he dreams of opening a restaurant and wants to make a name for himself. Who are Sir Mo Farah's real parents as the star reveals the truth about All rights reserved. When Mo asks why he was sent to the UK, his mother admits she has no idea why he ended up there. "We had lived, and still live, two different lives. I feel I lost the other half of myself, my twin brother. Leading Jewish organisation demands urgent meeting with The Guardian's editor after newspaper is engulfed by King's Coronation LIVE: Concert stage revealed, royal superfans camp out on The Mall and RAF airbase becomes Tim Bachman dead at 71: Bachman-Turner Overdrive guitarist passes following complications with cancer DOMINIC LAWSON: BT took me for a sucker, while Sky treated me as a valued customer. On meeting Mo, Hassan said "When I went to the airport, I ran to Mo and we both cried uncontrollably. Mo claimed that his father initially moved to London to try and make a living for the whole family but unfortunately, he had told their mother that he could only afford to support for three out of the six kids. OLYMPIC gold medal hero Mo Farah's identical twin brother has spoken about how they were separated as boys amid the chaos of civil . Farah once stated that Hassan lived in Somalia as a telecoms engineer with a wife and ten children. It is scheduled to start tonight at 9pm UK time on BBC. After two weeks of searching, Farahs dad was forced to return to London without his son. Farah's mother sent him and twin brother Hassan (L) to live with an uncle in Djibouti (Image: GETTY) Trending When producers track down Kinsi, he hopes she might provide more answers as the sister . He served four-and-a-half years and was on the Home Office's radar for two years before being deported. Violent conflict in Somalia drove the Farah family from their home in Mogadishu in 1990. "My father named me Hussein and I know over the years my name has changed but my father never knew anything," explains Mo. He has a beautiful family around him. His journey is an unlikely one that started in Somalia and took him as a refugee to Djibouti, then south London, and eventually athletics superstardom. GRV Media Ltd, 18 Mulberry Avenue, Widnes.