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Sarah Al-Jumaah, Ahmed Al-Sharbatly carry Saudi flag at Paralympic­s opening ceremony

The 7-member Saudi team will take part in three discipline­s at the event, which runs until Sept. 5

- Ali Khaled Dubai

The Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games are underway, with Sarah Al-Jumaah and Ahmed Al-Sharbatly carrying the Saudi flag into the Olympic stadium on Tuesday afternoon at the opening ceremony.

The 7-member Saudi team will take part in three discipline­s at the event, which runs until Sept. 5.

Twitter Link: https:// twitter.com/paralympic_sa/ status/1430151943­993925638

Abdulrahma­n Al-Qurashi, Fahad Al-Junaidel, Ali Al-Nakhli, Hassan Doshi and Al-Jumaah will represent the Kingdom in athletics. Maryam Al-Muraisel is competing in table tennis and Al-Sharbatly in equestrian­ism.

Al-Muraisel takes on South Korea’s Seo Su Yeon in the women’s singles on Wednesday at 7:40 a.m. Saudi time.

Tokyo Paralympic­s open after year’s virus delay

The Tokyo Paralympic­s opened with howling guitars and neonstreak­ed performers on Tuesday, with athletes ready to defy stereotype­s and shatter records despite a year-long pandemic delay.

Japan’s Emperor Naruhito declared the Games open surrounded by banks of vacant seats at the 68,000-capacity Olympic Stadium, with virus rules banning spectators from almost all events.

Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons hailed the athletes as “beacons of hope” who had put “blood, sweat and tears” into preparing for the event.

“Many doubted this day would happen, many thought it impossible, but thanks to the efforts of many, the most transforma­tive sports event on Earth is about to begin,” he said.

The pared-down ceremony took place in front of around 800 VIPs and officials, but there was a celebrator­y mood as 162 teams enjoyed their long-awaited moment in the global spotlight.

The ceremony took “We Have Wings” as its concept, creating a mini “airport” on the stadium field.

The segment told the story of a one-winged plane that takes to the skies, ending in a wild crescendo featuring musicians and dancers with disabiliti­es.

Three Japanese para-athletes — wheelchair tennis player Yui Kamiji, boccia player Shunsuke Uchida, and powerlifte­r Karin Morisaki — then combined to light the flame.

A reduced parade of roughly 3,400 Paralympia­ns and team officials entered the stadium, wearing masks but waving and dancing after the disappoint­ment of the postponeme­nt and worries about a potential cancellati­on.

A volunteer carried Afghanista­n’s flag into the stadium as a “sign of solidarity” with athletes from the country, one of 21 nations unable to compete at the Games.

The 13-day Paralympic­s, with 539 gold medals up for grabs across 22 sports, arrive two weeks after the close of an Olympics that also took place almost entirely behind closed doors over virus fears.

“Change starts with sport. And from tomorrow on, Paralympic athletes start once again to change to world,” Parsons said.

Paralympic athletes will be subject to the same rules as their Olympic counterpar­ts — including daily testing and limits on their movement.

The run-up to the Games has been fraught, with polling for months showing the Japanese were opposed to hosting them this

summer.

The mood seemed to shift once the Olympics got under way, with a majority saying they were glad it had gone ahead, but the virus situation in Japan has worsened dramatical­ly in recent weeks.

The country has recorded more than 25,000 daily infections in the past week, and while the death toll

remains comparativ­ely small at around 15,500, just 40 percent of the population is fully vaccinated.

The opening ceremony came with Tokyo and 12 other regions under a virus state of emergency that largely limits the opening hours of bars and restaurant­s and bans them from selling alcohol.

But several hundred people

gathered outside the stadium before the ceremony started, hoping to taste the atmosphere despite being locked out.

“I know this is a difficult time, but the athletes came to Japan despite the risks,” said 41-year-old Haruyo Yamamoto.

“Since we’re hosting the Games, I want them to perform at their best.”

A small handful of protesters also gathered outside the stadium, holding signs saying “No Paralympic­s” and shouting through megaphones. On Tuesday afternoon, crowds gathered in parts of Tokyo to watch the Blue Impulse air display team fly over trailing smoke in the blue, red and green colors of the Paralympic symbol.

But in a sign of the ongoing concerns, New Zealand’s Paralympic team did not participat­e in the opening ceremony, though organisers said it was the only team to opt-out.

Paralympic chiefs are hoping the mood will shift when the sporting action begins on Wednesday, with over 4,400 athletes itching to get started.

Among those competing is German long-jumper Markus Rehm, dubbed the ‘Blade Jumper,’ who is aiming to break the 8.62-meter world record he set himself in June.

Japan’s wheelchair tennis legend Shingo Kunieda will be aiming to excite home fans, while United States wheelchair racer Tatyana McFadden is hoping to add to her collection of 17 Paralympic medals.

China is expected to continue its long-running Paralympic gold-medal dominance, but host Japan will be hoping its record 254-strong team can repeat the country’s Olympic gold rush.

Badminton and taekwondo will make their Paralympic debuts in Tokyo.

The Games will also put the spotlight on Japan’s record of disability inclusion, with activists saying more remains to be done despite some progress, especially in Tokyo, on accessibil­ity.

 ?? AFP ?? Fireworks light up the sky during the opening ceremony for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Tuesday.
AFP Fireworks light up the sky during the opening ceremony for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Tuesday.

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