Golden Paralympics can boost Ukraine’s disabled veterans, says star fencer

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Ukrainians in Paris rally in memory of athletes they say have been killed during the war in Ukraine.

Ukrainians in Paris rally in memory of athletes they say have been killed during the war in Ukraine.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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The Paris Paralympics are hugely significant for powerhouses Ukraine as great performances can help maimed war veterans come to terms with their new circumstances, said Tokyo Games silver medallist Artem Manko.

The 25-year-old fencer believes that previous impressive medal hauls have raised respect for disabled people in the country to the highest level it has ever been.

However, for those who have suffered life-changing injuries on the battlefield since Russia invaded in February 2022, adjusting mentally is a challenge in itself.

Hence Manko says it is imperative he and his teammates maintain Ukraine’s pre-eminence when the Paralympics begin on Aug 28 – they finished third in the medals table in Rio and sixth in Tokyo.

“It not only helps boost morale back home, it helps disability in society,” he said.

“After the last Paralympics, Ukraine got so many medals we inspired the nation and I think we are now at the highest level of disability acceptance.

“That is really important right now as there are a lot of injured soldiers without legs, hands and in wheelchairs. It is hugely important for them to feel that disabled people are accepted in society.”

The challenge facing the Ukrainian para-athletes, though, is many have had to cope with disrupted preparations.

Manko has at least been able to train in Germany after the fencers were first invited there two years ago by their German counterparts.

Others like Tokyo bronze medallist swimmer Anna Hontar, a two-time world champion in the 50 metres freestyle, have not been so fortunate.

While the 20-year-old was looking forward to her second Games, she added that preparations have been tough.

“Every preparation for competitions is difficult and important, but this time it is more difficult, when there is a threat of missile attacks or shelling,” she said.

“We were asked to leave the sports hall and go to the bomb shelter for our safety. There are a lot of air raid sirens, and this affects your state of mind.

“The explosions that I recently heard in Poltava scared me a lot and I could not sleep peacefully.”

But training outside the country also has drawbacks, as badminton star Oksana Kozyna realised.

The 29-year-old, who was world champion in 2022, moved to France shortly after the invasion and lacked a sparring partner.

However, it was leaving her family that hit her hard, especially as she has a brother fighting on the frontline.

“Leaving your family is always difficult, especially if you have a good relationship, but I was forced to go to another country to defend my country in terms of sports,” Kozyna.

“This is a sore subject for me. In fact, normally I don’t talk about this to anyone...

“When leaving the country, leaving my family, I realised I was repeating the fate of my parents, this is very unpleasant.

“When I was born, my parents decided to leave me, and when I turned 15 they were found and when I left for another country, I realised that I was leaving them this time. I worry because a bomb could strike (them) at any time.”

Another unsettling factor for the Ukrainians is the presence of 96 Russians and Belarusians at the Paralympics, even though they are competing under a neutral flag and barred from attending the opening and closing ceremonies.

“I am shocked,” said Hontar. “This is outrageous, I do not know how it is possible to be near these opponents, and knowing that many of them support the attack on Ukraine.

“When the war began, on the very first day I returned from Nikolaev to Kherson, and two days later they captured Kherson and I was under occupation for a month. I saw a lot and I say our people are unbreakable, strong, incredible.”

Kozyna is more phlegmatic.

“For me, every opponent is like a Russian; I came, won and left,” she said. AFP

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