Npc: | RWA |
Npcname: | National Paralympic Committee of Rwanda |
Games: | Summer Paralympics |
Year: | 2016 |
Location: | Rio de Janeiro |
Competitors: | 13 |
Sports: | 2 |
Gold: | 0 |
Silver: | 0 |
Bronze: | 0 |
Appearances: | auto |
App Begin Year: | 2000 |
Rwanda competed at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 7 September to 18 September 2016.
The Rwanda Paralympic Committee was an Agitos Grant Award recipient, with the funding going towards athlete pathway development for Rio and Tokyo.[1] [2] The funding benefited 900 athletes around the country, while it also went to training coaches, classifiers and referees in Rwanda.[2]
The Rwanda NPC has a goal of sending its largest ever Paralympic delegation to Rio.[2]
See main article: article and Disability sport classification. Every participant at the Paralympics has their disability grouped into one of five disability categories; amputation, the condition may be congenital or sustained through injury or illness; cerebral palsy; wheelchair athletes, there is often overlap between this and other categories; visual impairment, including blindness; Les autres, any physical disability that does not fall strictly under one of the other categories, for example dwarfism or multiple sclerosis.[3] [4] Each Paralympic sport then has its own classifications, dependent upon the specific physical demands of competition. Events are given a code, made of numbers and letters, describing the type of event and classification of the athletes competing. Some sports, such as athletics, divide athletes by both the category and severity of their disabilities, other sports, for example swimming, group competitors from different categories together, the only separation being based on the severity of the disability.[5]
See main article: article and Athletics at the 2016 Summer Paralympics. Hermas Cliff Muvunyi was selected to represent Rwanda at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in the T46 400m and 1500m events. Muyunyi qualified for Rio at the 2015 IPC Athletics World Championships in Doha, Qatar. Prior to the Games, he announced that he would retire at the conclusion of the Rio Games.[6] Going into Rio, Muyunyi was based at the Amahoro National Stadium where he trained with Eric Karasira.
See main article: article and Sitting volleyball at the 2016 Summer Paralympics. Rwanda women's national sitting volleyball team qualified for the 2016 Games after winning the African Championships.[7]
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