Southern African NPCs Agree to Collectively Propel the Paralympic Movement Forward

Compartir
Compartir articulo

The National Paralympic Committees (NPCs) of Zambia, Lesotho, Namibia,

Botswana and Zimbabwe signed a Memorandum of Understanding at the

International Paralympic Committee (IPC) Regional Training Camp in Lusaka,

Zambia which aims to strengthen the Paralympic Movement in Southern Africa.

The IPC camp, which ran from 3-8 October, brought together almost 50

athletes, coaches and administrators from the five NPCs to share knowledge

and ideas.

Sponsored by the Norwegian Olympic and Paralympic Committee and

Confederation of Sports (NIF) and Charity and Sport, delegates had the

opportunity to attend a series of workshops and sports training sessions.

The NPCs used the opportunity to sign the Memorandum of Understanding for

South to South Cooperation, which covers training, competitions, awareness

raising and government lobbying.

They agreed to co-operate by exchanging training programmes for leadership,

coaches and classifiers. In addition they will exchange competition

programmes in Athletics, Powerlifting, Wheelchair Basketball, Goalball,

Sitting Volleyball and Swimming.

In the memorandum, the NPCs also committed to "promote independent living

among the disabled through entrepreneurship skills development; share

relevant information on the development of sports for the disabled; and

embark on awareness campaigns of sport for persons with disabilities in

rural areas."

A key aspect of the memorandum was also to jointly exert pressure on their

respective governments to provide financial support and tax relief, make all

sports venues accessible to persons with a disability and increase influence

and recognition for Paralympic Sport at government level.

"The five National Paralympic Committees also agreed to urge their

governments to include members of the National Paralympic Committees in all

government sports-related committees and international conferences" and

"employ full-time employees with knowledge of disability sports in the

Directorate of Sport," the agreement read.

For more information, contact: craig.spence@paralympic.org

As a service to our readers, Around the Rings will provide verbatimtexts of selected press releases issued by Olympic-relatedorganizations, federations, businesses and sponsors.

These press releases appear as sent to Around the Rings and are not edited for spelling, grammar or punctuation.

Your complete source of news about the Olympics is www.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only.

Recents Articles

Thomas Bach, on the opening ceremony: “The decision is clear, it will be in the Seine”

The president of the IOC assured that the original idea will be maintained in the midst of growing terrorist threats and explained that the French authorities “are taking into account all the scenarios and are updating them every day”. The start of the Olympic Games will be on July 26th.

Thomas Bach, sobre la ceremonia inaugural: “La decisión es clara, será en el Sena”

El presidente del COI aseguró que se mantendrá la idea original en medio de las crecientes amenazas terroristas y explicó que las autoridades francesas "están teniendo en cuenta todos los escenarios y los están actualizando cada día". El inicio de los Juegos Olímpicos será el 26 de julio.

Ucrania les recomendó a sus atletas cómo actuar si tienen contacto con los rusos y bielorrusos en París 2024

“Con el fin de proteger los intereses nacionales de Ucrania”, las recomendaciones para los deportistas van desde las publicaciones en redes sociales a registrar cualquier violación de las condiciones que el COI impuso para que los atletas de Rusia y Bielorrusia puedan competir de manera neutral en los próximos Juegos Olímpicos.

Ukraine recommended to its athletes how to act if they have contact with the Russians and Belarusians in Paris 2024

“In order to protect the national interests of Ukraine”, recommendations for athletes range from social media posts to recording any violation of the conditions imposed by the IOC so that athletes from Russia and Belarus can compete neutrally in the next Olympic Games.

The Refugee Team for the Olympic Games was announced

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) unveiled this Thursday its largest refugee Olympic team to date for the Paris 2024 Games, with 36 athletes from 11 different countries. The athletes, some from Syria, Sudan, Iran, Afghanistan and Cuba, will compete in 12 sports.