Nigeria at the 2000 Summer Paralympics explained

Npc:NGR
Npcname:Nigeria Paralympic Committee
Games:Summer Paralympics
Year:2000
Location:Sydney
Competitors:31 (20 male, 11 female)
Rank:22
Gold:7
Silver:1
Bronze:5
Appearances:auto
App Begin Year:1992

Nigeria competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics, sending a 31-member strong delegation that won 13 medals, 7 of which were gold.

Team

Nigeria sent a 31-member strong team, which included 11 women and 20 men.

Background

In many parts of Black Africa, people who have disabilities that include insanity, and physical disabilities such as impairments and deformities often face cultural barriers to participation because of attitudes related to their disabilities. These include beliefs that they acquired their disabilities because their parents were witches or they are wizards. Their disability is often seen as a result of a personal failing on their part. As such, there is often tremendous cultural pressure for people with physical disabilities to remain hidden and out of the public eye. In many places, they are perceived to be monsters in need of healing.[1] This is the context to which Nigerian Paralympians engage both society and sport internally, in their own country.[2]

Medals

Nigeria won seven gold medals at the Sydney Games. This was the most in the country's history after making their debut at the 1992 Summer Paralympics.[3] The Nigerian Paralympic delegation left the Games having won more medals than their Olympic counterparts.

MedalNameSportEvent
Women's javelin F58
Men's -67.5 kg
Women's -48 kg
Women's -60 kg
Women's -67.5 kg
Men's singles 9
Men's teams 9
Women's -44 kg
Men's -56 kg
Women's -52 kg
Women's -75 kg
Women's +82.5 kg
Men's singles 9

Athletics

See main article: Athletics at the 2000 Summer Paralympics. Nigerian athletes competed at the 1999 Disabled Sports USA DS/USA's National Summer Games as part of their preparation efforts for the 2000 Games.[4]

Powerlifting

See main article: Powerlifting at the 2000 Summer Paralympics. Lucy Ejike competed in women's powerlifting. These Games were the ones where she made her Paralympic debut.[5]

Table tennis

See also: Table tennis at the 2000 Summer Paralympics.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Paralympic Games: Empowerment Or Side Show?. Gilbert. Keith. Schantz. Otto J.. Schantz. Otto. 2008-01-01. Meyer & Meyer Verlag. 9781841262659. en.
  2. Thomas, Gareth Martin and Banks, Tim (2013). ''We Aren't Racing a Fair Race': Rawls, Sen, and the Paralympic Games'. Sociological Research Online 18(3)14 <http://www.socresonline.org.uk/18/3/14.html
  3. Web site: 6 Facts to know about Nigeria at the Paralympics. 2016-09-02. Nigeria Today. 2016-10-25.
  4. Evans, Elizabeth. "Springfield College plays host to two summer national championships." Palaestra Fall 1997: 36+. Academic OneFile. Web. 26 Oct. 2016.
  5. News: Nigeria's Nollywood winner and other Paralympic surprises. 2016-09-13. BBC News. en-GB. 2016-10-25.