The Star Malaysia

Heroes in Rio but struggling at home

Paralympia­ns return to lack of progress for disabled people despite glory

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KIEV: A group of children stand by a swimming pool in Kiev clutch their goggles and dream of emulating their heroes they just watched scoop up medals at the Paralympic Games in Rio.

Ukraine’s team finished in a surprising third place in Brazil, ahead of giants like the United States and Germany – a stunning result for the ex-Soviet nation where disabled people often feel forgotten.

“What is your biggest dream?” coach Raisa Lagutenko demands of the children, who have conditions ranging from cerebral palsy to stunted growth.

“To become a Paralympic medallist,” they shout back.

Lagutenko has been training disabled kids for over a decade and she insists the dire situation they once faced in Ukraine is improving.

“Ten years ago, this pool was the only one available for people with special needs,” said Lagutenko, who had three of her prodigies competing in Rio.

“The situation is getting better – new sports clubs are being built and the Paralympic­s were on TV, which makes society more perceptive to people with disabiliti­es.”

But despite some progress and the glow of Paralympic glory, most agree that Ukraine still has a long way to go.

Basics from access ramps to equal opportunit­ies are frequently missing as the country still struggles to make progress despite its recent shift towards the West.

“Let’s face it: it is easier for Ukrainian Paralympia­ns to get a gold medal than to get to the store, or even a cinema in Kiev,” Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, Deputy Prime Minister on European and Euro- Atlantic Integratio­n, lamented.

For some, the problems can be blamed on the legacy of the Soviet period when the disabled were often consigned to grim state-run institutio­ns or forced to live in farflung towns.

During Moscow’s hosting of the Summer Olympic Games in 1980, people with disabiliti­es were cleared from the streets to keep them out of view.

“It is a shame that so far, unfortunat­ely, this separates us from European societies,” KlympushTs­intsadze wrote on Facebook.

Dmytro Shchebetyu­k, 26, an archer on the Paralympic­s reserve team and co-founder of Dostupno UA, a project monitoring accessibil­ity for people with disabiliti­es, agrees that he finds it hard to come back after travelling abroad.

He complains that many countries make life normal for the disabled, providing facilities such as sidewalks and undergroun­d passageway­s with ramps, and that returning home was “something one has to get used to again”.

Sports “is practicall­y the only occupation where you can realise yourself and truly feel like you are living a fulfilling life”, he added.

When Andriy Shcherbats­kiy, 25, was left in a wheelchair after breaking his neck six years ago, he wondered how he could ever cope.

“I thought, how can I go on living?”, he said.

His hometown of Vinnytsya, a west-central city with a population of nearly 400,000, lacked the basic infrastruc­ture to help disabled people get around and daily existence seemed a daunting challenge.

But authoritie­s in the city – repeatedly recognised as the most livable in Ukraine – have led the way in making their streets more disabled-friendly and have started installing facilities that have long been taken for granted in the West.

“After some time, a year later, accessible public transport started appearing one by one,” he said.

Now when Shcherbats­kiy wants to get to the city centre for his table tennis practice, the bus driver is prepared to help him. — AFP

 ??  ?? Aiming high: Schebetyuk (right) taking part in a training session in Kiev. — AFP
Aiming high: Schebetyuk (right) taking part in a training session in Kiev. — AFP

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