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If the opening ceremony for last month’s Olympic Games in Beijing was struck
by controversy after it was discovered that the beautiful young girl who
“sang” to billions was miming to the sound of another girl, whose face did
not fit, the opening ceremony of the Paralympics today poses even bigger
questions for the Chinese organisers.
Will there be a diversity of disabilities represented? In the Olympics
ceremony, the 56 children who organisers claimed came from the 56 ethnic
groups in China were from the dominant Han group. How will the complexities
of spinal cord injuries, amputations, cerebral palsy sufferers, blindness
and “les autres”, the five broad classes of the Paralympics, be
portrayed?
Organisers said that while the Olympics opening ceremony featured the idea of
harmony, the Paralympics ceremony would emphasise humanitarian concerns,
hope and warmth.
Zhang Yimou, the acclaimed film-maker who directed the Olympics opening
ceremony, is in charge of the Paralympics ceremony as well. Four hundred
deaf girls will perform a sign-language dance called “Hello, Stars” and more
than 2,000 young kung fu students will perform an animated robot dance.
On an executive level, the Beijing Games have been inclusive. The
wheel-chair-using Deng Pufang, the founder and chairman of the China
Disabled Persons’ Federation (CDPF), is also executive president of the
Beijing organising committee. The first son of Deng Xiaoping, China’s
political leader from the late 1970s to the early 1990s, Deng was paralysed
at the age of 24 after falling out of a window in still unexplained
circumstances while imprisoned by Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution.
Since then, Deng has had the power and influence to put disability rights on
the agenda in China like no individual before him.
But others have not been so lucky. One person who has been excluded from the
Paralympics is Fang Zheng. His absence is indicative of the problems of
human rights rather than just disabled rights in China.
A talented athlete, Fang might have represented China at the Olympics and
would have represented them at the Paralympics, but for how he lost his
legs. On June 4, 1989, the tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square to crush the
student rebellion and Fang’s legs in the process as he attempted to rescue a
friend.
Fang, now 41, won two gold medals at the All-China Disabled Athletic Games in
1992 but was refused permission to represent China internationally, for fear
that his story would embarrass the Communist regime.
If China’s right to host the 29th Olympics was questioned by many, their right
to host the thirteenth Paralympics, which are bid for simultaneously and run
until September 17, is even more complicated. The first Paralympic Games
were held in Rome in 1960, building on the Stoke Mandeville Games of 1948.
China did not send a team until 1984.
The disabled were not officially recognised in China until after the
foundation of the CDPF in 1983. Between the fusion of the new socialist
idealism and the old patriarchal hegemony in which a strong, healthy body
equalled a strong, healthy nation, there was little room for “imperfection”.
The CDPF estimates that there are 83 million disabled people in China, as many
people as in the whole of Germany. Still, critics say that this figure is
unrealistically low in a country of 1.3 billion. Official figures say that
Britain has ten million officially disabled people, or one sixth of the
population.
But just acknowledging their existence in China represents progress. Just as
the Olympics were pitched as a way of advancing human rights and equality in
China, so it is hoped that the Paralympics will mark a great leap forward in
disability rights.
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