CHINA

Not Yet On the Medal Stand

 

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There are some 83 million disabled people in China, but the country has never been particularly hospitable to them. Why bother building subway ramps and bus lifts, the attitude has long been, for people who aren't expected to leave home? But when Beijing was awarded the 2008 Summer Olympics, the Paralympic Games, an event featuring 4,000 disabled athletes, came along with it. So in the spirit of the 12-day competition, which opened on Saturday, China's government raced to bring Beijing up to international standards, creating 16 special bus lines for the athletes, installing street-crossing signals for the blind and adding wheelchair-friendly subway exits. It even outfitted a section of the Great Wall with a ramp and an elevator.

But according to athletes and officials, Beijing is still a long way from being disability-friendly. Many sidewalks are uneven. Most curbs don't have ramps. And traveling halfway across the world might be easier for Paralympians than crossing Chang'an Avenue, the east-west artery where Tiananmen and the Forbidden City are located: the massive avenue, like many others in Beijing, has no crosswalk—and drivers don't brake for pedestrians. Oral Miller, an executive with the International Blind Sports Association, told NEWSWEEK he was warned by a guide to "run across the street, because they won't stop for you."

Although the head of the Paralympics organizing committee has praised the city for its efforts, not everyone is satisfied. IBSA officials say the hotel has no Braille explanations. They were depending on the Paralympic buses, but their hotel isn't included in the route. Esther Vergeer, a four-time wheelchair tennis champion from the Netherlands, had visited the Great Wall before—in 2007, on the back of a local stranger—and she was excited to make the trip on her own this time. But when she inquired, the wheelchair-friendly section was closed, with no explanation.

© 2008

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: garbo527 @ 09/10/2008 4:40:27 PM

    jordonc.fan you are strange.....

  • Posted By: Aaron @ 09/08/2008 7:10:19 PM

    Chian needs time to get improved, so far it is doing just great. Trying to get herself involved in the international community, China has shown its kindness and hospitality to the world. Don't forget, only 30 years since China has been throught the MARKET ECONOMY period...don't be so hard on it. Still, China needs a long way to go.

  • Posted By: jordan c. fan @ 09/07/2008 6:14:41 AM

    (continued from post below )

    If you still remember the controversy surrounding George W. Bush's arrogant official visit to the Buckingham Palace while showing ill manners, great disrespect and even insulting the British people, the Queen should have gotten rid of Bush right there and then. This reminds me of a great Shakespearean play set in Medieval London or Scotland taught by my primary school English English (no typo) teachers:

    "If it were done when ???tis done, then t'were well
    It were done quickly: If the assassination
    Could trammel up the consequence, and catch
    With his surcease success, that but this blow
    Might be the be-all and end-all here....."

    Like myself, Shakespeare was a competent prophet of the events happening today. With the unification of Britain and China as the ???be all,??? do it ???quickly,??? and the fall of the United States as the ???end all???, ???here??? -- where else but London Olympic itself? With my great supernatural power and the determination of the Chinese and British people such Acts will certainly be a success in bringing eternal peace to the entire world. This quotation should summarize this post perfectly.

    As Prophet of Environment, I am now making a wish upon the stars, that the stars of the Chinese 5-stars flag be increased by four, to nine (9) stars, representing the English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish people. So ask your British friends to read my posts and support my great ideology.

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