This photo taken on August 14, 2012 shows Thin Seng Hon (L) running during a training session at the national Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh. (AFP PHOTO / TANG CHHIN SOTHY)
Posted: 27 August 2012
channelnewsasia.ocm
PHNOM PENH: It has
the world's highest percentage of amputees yet Cambodia is sending just
one athlete to the Paralympics, an event critics say increasingly
favours nations that can afford the latest high tech gear.
Thin
Seng Hon, who was born without a fully formed right leg, will be
Cambodia's sole representative in London early next month when she
competes in the 100m and 200m sprints in the below-the-knee amputee
category.
Her "lucky leg", as she calls the $2,500 J-shaped
running blade which allows her to race, helped her to three podium
places at a regional athletics meet last year.
But she doubts it will keep pace with the higher-tech prosthetics of her rivals in London.
"I
don't expect to win a medal," the 28-year-old said after a morning
training session at Phnom Penh's run-down Olympic Stadium, explaining
her opponents will likely benefit from "more modern prosthetics" costing
several times that of her own.
Living in a poor country already
puts her at a disadvantage -- she trains on a dirt track and balances
running with a full-time job at a souvenir shop where she earns US$120 a
month.
But it is her artificial leg, paid for by donations from
friends, that leaves her trailing rivals before the competition even
begins.
The prosthetic is not custom-built for sprinting and is
less comfortable and shock absorbent than those owned by her first world
rivals, prompting her coach Phay Sok to bemoan a technology gap pitting
his protege against those with the "best" prosthetics "worth tens of
thousands of dollars."
Yet Thin Seng Hon is lucky to be on the plane to London at all.
None
of Cambodia's disabled athletes qualified for the Games, leaving the
nation's hopes of glory dependent on a wildcard entry, gifted by the
Paralympics' governing body.
The single spot belies Cambodia's
grim status as home to the most amputees per capita anywhere in the
world, a statistic driven in part by decades of unrest that have left
the small nation littered with landmines.
An estimated 25,000
people have lost limbs to mines, according to figures from charity the
Halo Trust, but successful demining schemes have lowered the incident
rate over the last decade.
Now, like many other developing
countries, the majority of the nation's disabled athletes are victims of
disease, traffic accidents and poor medical care.
Cambodian
sporting figures are furious only one wildcard was offered and want more
slots to offset a lack of funding, facilities and technologically
advanced equipment.
Cambodia's humble representation is put into
perspective by the figures which show some 4,200 athletes from 166
countries will be competing for 503 gold medals in what will be the
biggest Paralympic Games to date.
If poorer countries are not
well represented at the Games they will fall into a spiral of sporting
decline, warned wheelchair racer Van Vun.
"If we can't take part,
we'll never know the ability of athletes from big countries or learn
from their training," he told AFP after breezing by rivals in a training
race in a park in the capital.
The 26-year-old, who was
paralysed by polio at the age of three, won two silver medals at the
2011 ASEAN Para Games in Indonesia -- where Thin picked up a gold and
two silvers -- but was crushed to learn his performance fell short of
the qualifying standard for London.
The International Paralympic
Committee (IPC) says demand for wildcards from the 166 competing
countries outstrips the spots available in the different disciplines.
"We
had thousands of wildcard applications," Craig Spence, the IPC's
director of media and communications told AFP, adding the body handed
out 61 wildcards to 50 mostly developing nations.
"At the end of
the day the Paralympic Games is an elite sporting event and we want the
best athletes in the world to be competing."
Acknowledging the
widening technology gap, Spence said the IPC had regulations in place to
"try to ensure a level playing field" and that the wildcard system --
capped at two per country -- aimed to include poorer nations.
Hundreds
of athletes from developing nations will compete in London, he added,
noting that many among them "will have just one, two or three athletes"
compared to Team GB for example, which will have some 300 participants,
and the more than 280 Chinese Paralympians.
Despite her long odds
for a medal finish, Thin Seng Hon is delighted to be representing
Cambodia and hopes to at least beat her personal best sprint times.
"I
feel excited and I will try my best because I'm the only athlete to
participate," she said beaming. "They (Cambodian officials) picked me
over all the others."
- AFP/wm
1 comment:
Good luck girl,you're the bomb!!! Can't wait to see you on T.V....
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