Wheelchair
Athletes
The Paralympics
Games are an elite multi-sport event for athletes with a
disability. This includes mobility disabilities, amputees, visual disabilities
and those with cerebral
palsy. The Paralympics Games are held every four years,
following the Olympic
Games, and are governed by the International
Paralympics Committee (IPC). (The Paralympics Games are
sometimes confused with the Special Olympics,
which are only for people with intellectual
disabilities.)
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History
SirLudwig Guttmann
organized a sports competition in 1948 which
became known as the Stoke Mandeville
Games, involving World War II
veterans with spinal
cord injuries; in 1952
competitors from the Netherlands
took part in the competition, giving an international notion to the
movement. The first Olympic-style games for athletes with a disability
were held in Rome
in 1960;
officially called the 9th Annual International Stoke Mandeville Games,
these are considered to be the first Paralympics Games. The first
Winter Paralympics were held in Örnsköldsvik,
Sweden
in 1976.
Since 1988, the
Summer Paralympics have been held in the conjunction with the Olympic Games
in the same host city. This practice was adopted in 1992 for the Winter
Paralympics, and became an official policy of the International
Olympic Committee and the IPC following a June 19, 2001
agreement. The Games take place three weeks after the closing of the
Olympics, in the same host city and using the same facilities. Cities
bidding to host the Olympic Games must include the Paralympics Games in
their bid, and typically both Games are now run by a single organizing
committee.
In the 1996 Atlanta Games
athletes with intellectual
disabilities were allowed to participate for the first time.
However following cheating in the 2000 Sydney Games,
in which non-disabled athletes were entered in the Spanish
Basketball ID team, such athletes were banned by the IPC. Following an
anti-corruption drive, the International Sports Federation for Persons
with an Intellectual Disability (INAS-FID) lobbied to have these
athletes reinstated. Beginning in 2004, athletes with an intellectual
disability began to be re-integrated into Paralympics sport
competitions, although they remain excluded from the Paralympics Games.
The IPC has stated that it will re-evaluate their participation
following the Beijing
2008 Paralympics Games.
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