Google – AFP, Maria Antonova (AFP), 7 March 2014
Sochi —
Russian President Vladimir Putin opened the Winter Paralympics in the Black Sea
resort of Sochi on Friday and was immediately confronted by an emotional
Ukrainian protest on a politically-charged night.
As athletes
from 45 countries took part in the opening ceremony, only one Ukrainian
competitor appeared in a symbolic, scaled-down presence of the country that has
denounced Russia's intervention in Crimea.
Spectators
gave huge cheers and some even stood to applaud 37-year-old skier and biathlete
Mykhailo Tkachenko who came through the Fisht stadium in his wheelchair.
Dancers
perform during the Opening
Ceremony of XI Paralympic Olympic games
at the Fisht Olympic Stadium close to city
of Sochi on March 7, 2014 (AFP, Kirill
Kudrayavtsev)
|
Without a
trace of a smile, Tkachenko proudly carried his country's national flag for his
31-strong team who did not enter the stadium with him.
Ukraine had
earlier said it would refrain from any political protests during the ceremony,
and paralympic committee head Valery Sushkevich even said he had to persuade a
teenage athlete against expressing her anger at Russia.
Ukraine had
also decided that they would not boycott the Games which run until March 16.
Some
Western countries, including the United States, Britain and Germany, have not
sent government delegations in protest at Russia's Crimea intervention.
In what
appeared as a taunt towards the US, organisers played a popular 1990s Russian
song called "Good-bye, America" when the Russian team closed the
parade.
Putin had
said that he hoped the Paralympic spirit will help "cool the
tensions" surrounding Russia's policy on Ukraine, which has already caused
the worst East-West crisis since the Cold War.
Sushkevich
told journalists that he personally appealed to Putin for peace but did not
receive any assurances.
"I
don't remember a situation in the history of the Paralympic movement when the
host country began an intervention into a participating country," he said.
"We
hope there will be steps for de-escalation, for lessening the threat of
war."
Holding
back tears, Paralympic skier Grygoriy Vovchinsky said his team "is from
all over Ukraine" and "speaks both Russian and Ukrainian."
"We
are here, we represent a young country, and we are ready to fight, to show that
we are a strong nation, an independent nation. We love life, we love sport, and
we love a fair fight," said Vovchinsky.
- 'New
history of Russia' -
The
Paralympics in Russia are a major symbolic step for a country that for decades
stigmatised people with disabilities.
"A new
history of Russia is beginning, a history without barriers and
stereotypes," said Sochi Organising Committee head Dmitry Chernyshenko.
One month
after Russia mounted a dazzling Winter Olympics opening, Friday's Paralympics
curtain-raiser featured classical ballet numbers and also included a monumental
icebreaker that drifted across the stage to the sound of crushing ice.
Russia's
notable Paralympians participated in the final relay to light the cauldron,
including swimmer Olesya Vladykina and skier Sergei Shilov, who lit it with the
final torch to booming fireworks.
Artists
perform during the Opening Ceremony of XI Paralympic Olympic
games at the Fisht
Olympic Stadium close to city of Sochi on March 7,
2014 (AFP, Kirill
Kudryavtsev)
|
International
Paralympic Committee president Philip Craven, who was joined at the ceremony by
International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach, praised organisers for
transforming Sochi "to make it accessible for everyone" and building
"perfect" venues.
Russia's
team placed first in the Winter Olympics, an unexpected success which was a
major boost to national pride.
A total of
45 countries and 575 athletes will be competing in Sochi in five Paralympic
sports, including alpine skiing, biathlon, cross-country skiing, wheelchair
curling and sledge hockey.
For the
first time ever, alpine skiing will include snowboarding as a discipline.
Soviet
Russia did not participate in the Paralympic movement until the 1988 Games in
Seoul, at the onset of perestroika, and people with disabilities often remained
invisible in society, unable to exit their apartments or even sent to special
homes.
The stigma
against people with disabilities still persists in the country, which only
recently began to invest in urban infrastructure that ensures equal access.
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