India’s
Rio 2016 Paralympics medal winners felicitated
Four Indian Rio Paralympics medal winners were felicitated in
Mumbai by a host of personalities, including Sachin Tendulkar
Four Indian Rio
Paralympics medal winners — Devendra Jhajharia, Mariyappan Thangavelu, Deepa
Malik and Varun Singh Bhati — were felicitated here by a host of personalities,
including cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar.
Jhajharia had won the gold
medal in men’s javelin throw F46 and is the only Indian to have clinched two
gold medals in Paralympics.
Thangavelu also clinched a
gold medal in men’s high jump T42 while Bhati won a bronze in the same event.
Malik became the first Indian woman to bag a medal in Paralympics by clinching
a silver in women’s F53 shot put.
Each of the medal winners
received a cheque of Rs 15 lakh. It was also announced that medal winners in
earlier editions of Paralympics will also be presented Rs 15 lakh each.
These include Murlikant
Petkar (1972), Bhimrao Keskar, Joginder Singh Bedi (both 1984), Rajinder Singh
Rahelu (2014) and H N Girisha (2012).
The GoSports Foundation
would also receive Rs 35 lakh to continue its endeavour in supporting and
developing future Paralympic champions.
The contributors to the
corpus of fund include Tendulkar, V Chamundeshwarnath (President Hyderabad
District Badminton Association), Nimmagadda Prasad (Industrialist and Co-owner
Kerala Blasters), Dr Azad Moopen (Chairman and Managing Director, Aster DM
Healthcare), Sanjay Ghodawat (Chairman, Sanjay Ghodawat Group) and Abhay Gadgil
(Director, Abhay Gadgil Constructions).
Speaking on the occasion,
Malik said, “It is sad that every time we say Paralympics, we have to add it is
Olympics Paralymics. It is still not understood that Paralympics also means
Olympic-level competition (for the differently abled). I am grateful to Sachin
Sir (for the initiative).”
“My world record was
broken after 12 years in Rio. Before this, I held the world record in 2004,
which no one was able to break. I went to Finland for training and used to
train for 8 hours which is the longest training of my life,” said Jhajharia.
“I was the flag-bearer of
the country in Rio, so the responsibility was more on me for India. People
discussed that Devendra is 35 years-old and will not be able to do. But age is
not a factor, your efforts (matter).
“I consider Sachin Sir as
my role model. I am happy I could meet him,” he added.
The Rio Paralympics
champion athletes were also presented smartphones and laptops from Smartron
along with free lifetime healthcare support at Aster DM Healthcare facilities
in India as part of their felicitation.
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