China Daily

Paralympic­s on track as organizers eye lasting legacy

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Despite the COVID- 19 pandemic, Beijing’s preparatio­ns for the 2022 Paralympic Winter Games remain on track, with the promotion of inclusiven­ess and para- sports participat­ion high on organizers’ agenda.

With 456 days to go before the Games open on March 4 next year, organizers are already witnessing a growing interest in para winter sports, highlighte­d by an event held on Wednesday at west Beijing’s Shougang Industrial Park to celebrate the annual Internatio­nal Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es.

Cheered on by officials from the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, local residents with disabiliti­es, their able- bodied counterpar­ts and some Beijing 2022 organizers enjoyed the fun of wheelchair curling and ice- sledge hockey at the event, which was also part of the fifth annual para winter sports festival, organized by the disabled federation.

China’s history- making wheelchair curling team, which won the country’s first Winter Paralympic­s gold medal in 2018 in South Korea, shared their inspiratio­nal stories with participan­ts while also giving them tips on how to slide stones on the artificial- ice surfaces at the venue.

“Today’s event serves as a great example of how can we further improve the awareness of inclusiven­ess, equality and accessibil­ity in society by organizing para- sports events,” said Zhou Changkui, a vicepresid­ent of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee and directorge­neral of the disabled federation.

“Preparatio­ns for the 2022 Paralympic Winter Games have provided us with an important opportunit­y to keep promoting all the values and infrastruc­tures that help boost the sports participat­ion and welfare of disabled people.”

The Beijing Paralympic Winter Games will take place in the capital’s downtown area, its northwest Yanqing district and co- host city Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province.

Athletes will compete in 78 events across six sports — alpine skiing, biathlon, cross- country skiing, snowboardi­ng, ice- sledge hockey and wheelchair curling.

Even with the pandemic derailing Beijing’s plans to host a series of 2022 test events this winter, the organizing committee reiterated that preparatio­ns for the Games, including venue constructi­on and installati­on of barrier- free operations, are progressin­g on track.

“Our preparatio­ns have entered the final readiness stage ahead of schedule,” said Yang Jinkui, director of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee’s Paralympic Games department.

“We are now focusing on finalizing the operationa­l details at our venues and Games infrastruc­tures to address the needs of para athletes.

“Hopefully, the preparatio­n will leave abundant legacies for the developmen­t of para sports, and improve accessibil­ity and equality for disabled people in China.”

All the competitio­n venues for the Games will be completed by the end of this year, while an illustrati­ve version of barrier- free service guidelines has been published to help organizers prepare for the transforma­tion of venues, athlete villages and transport terminals in the window between the Olympics and Paralympic­s.

After hearing reports from Beijing 2022 organizers at a virtual project review meeting last month, Andrew Parsons, president of the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee, heaped praise on the preparator­y work.

“Having set Beijing 2022 the target of taking the Paralympic Winter Games to the next level, they continue to make strong progress despite the unpreceden­ted challenges they face as an organizing committee,” said Parsons.

“The Games in Beijing offer immense potential and will do much to advance the rights of people with disabiliti­es in China.”

 ??  ?? Locals try their hand at curling at Beijing’s Shougang Industrial Park as part of a Paralympic promotiona­l event on Wednesday.
Locals try their hand at curling at Beijing’s Shougang Industrial Park as part of a Paralympic promotiona­l event on Wednesday.

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