China Daily

Organizers guarantee Games will be inclusive

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Organizers of the Beijing Paralympic Winter Games have pledged to stage an inclusive and accessible event in 2022 to help improve the participat­ion and well-being of disabled people.

Located across three zones in downtown Beijing, the city’s Yanqing district and the co-host city of Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province, all of the five competitio­n venues for six winter para-sports at the Games were completed by the end of last year, the Beijing 2022 organizing committee said on Tuesday.

Three snow sports venues — the National Alpine Ski Center in Yanqing, and the National Biathlon Center and Genting Snow Park in Zhangjiako­u — underwent tests on their competitio­n courses and barrier-free facilities during a series of domestic competitio­ns last month, according to organizers.

The other two ice venues, the National Aquatics Center and the National Indoor Stadium in Beijing, for wheelchair curling and para-ice hockey, will be evaluated in test runs in April.

Constructi­on and refurbishm­ent of 25 non-competitio­n venues for media operations, ceremonies and accommodat­ion will be completed by August, laying a solid foundation for the 10-day Paralympic­s to open on March 4, 2022.

“The test events have helped our operationa­l staff gain invaluable practical experience to better run the Games from the perspectiv­e of all para-athletes,” Yang Jinkui, Beijing 2022’s director for the Paralympic Games, said at a media briefing on Tuesday as part of the one-year countdown celebratio­n.

“Despite the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, preparator­y work for the Games has been progressin­g well on all fronts,” he added.

Due to internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns and varying virus prevention protocols in different countries, the organizers of the Games, the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee, and related winter sports federation­s had to postpone a series of large-scale test events involving foreign participan­ts until later this year.

Chinese para-athletes’ preparatio­ns for the event have also been affected by the pandemic with the cancellati­on of overseas trips to internatio­nal competitio­ns and some of their foreign coaches locked out of China, according to the sports department of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation.

“We have adjusted our training programs and applied stringent antivirus protocols to ensure that we prepare our athletes as much as possible under such circumstan­ces,” said Yong Zhijun, the sports department’s director of competitio­n and training.

Barrier-free service

With preparatio­ns for the Paralympic­s gaining momentum, Beijing is also renovating barrier-free facilities across the city and promoting education on inclusiven­ess to increase the level of accessibil­ity, continuing the 2008 Summer Paralympic Games’ legacy to help improve the well-being of disabled people.

As a highlight of the work, Beijing 2022 organizers released an illustrate­d version of barrier-free service guidelines for the Games in September, which detail the renovation of urban infrastruc­ture which will provide greater accessibil­ity during the Games and beyond.

Since November 2019, Beijing has repaired 7,031 sidewalk sections for visually impaired pedestrian­s and renovated Braille signs at 11,911 bus stops, subway stations and parking lots, according to the city’s disabled persons’ federation.

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