From the DW:
“Wheelchair basketball: How
disabled do you have to be?”
Germany's wheelchair basketball
star Barbara Gross is no longer allowed to play for her country. Under new
criteria established by authorities, Gross' handicap is no longer sufficient.
The decision has caused outrage. "We are fairly reassured that the team
won't be torn apart, but at the same time we are shocked that a negative
decision has been made," Mareike Miller, captain of Germany's wheelchair
basketball team, told DW. "We are concerned about our teammate, for whom
this news is terrible. We hope that we can appeal."
The teammate in question is
Barbara Gross. In the last few weeks, the 26-year-old received a message from
the governing body of wheelchair basketball (IWBF) stating that she was no
longer allowed to play international basketball. Gross was one of nine athletes
who fell through the net of the International Paralympic Committee's (IPC)
"Classification Code." Due to the current proceedings, Gross does not
want to comment. Under instruction from the IPC, the IWBF checked the status of
132 wheelchair basketball players. Eleven of those were German, 10 were allowed
to keep playing. One was not. Up until now, Gross was in the category of
"minimal disability." In her day-to-day life she does not need a
wheelchair. After a bad traffic accident and many operations, Gross was no
longer able to compete in 'walking sports,' so she began to play wheelchair
basketball. Since 2015, Gross has been a part of Germany's team and has won
five medals at international competitions, including gold at the 2015 European
Championships. At the Paralympic Games in 2016, she won silver with Germany and
afterwards received the "Silver laurel leaf" from then federal
President Joachim Gauck. The award is the highest sporting accolade in Germany.
Gross' removal from the sport has been met with great disapproval. "Until
now, you were only thrown out of the sport if you had doped," said team
captain Miller. "Gross was approved to play our sport years ago, and was a
part of the team in Rio. Now she's being treated as if she had done something
wrong." The sport's governing body sympathize with concerns about the
IPC's rule changes: "The IWBF still believes in our classification
philosophy and that the sport should be inclusive for all those with a
recognized impairment of their lower limbs," said Ulf Mehrens, president
of the association. This is a sideswipe at the IPC, who, in February,
threatened wheelchair basketball's expulsion from the Paralympic program should
the association not implement the new, strict classification codes.
Without warning "Wheelchair basketball is one of the
most inclusive sports in the world. It is unfair that individual athletes who
don't fit into boxes designed by the IPC are being shut out," added
Miller. "The medical situation isn't so different that there is a reason
for this." In short, those affected feel they have been blindsided. "There
was no warning whatsoever," Miller continued. "We were previously
told that nothing would change in wheelchair basketball for now." Friedhelm
Julius Beucher, president of Germany's Parasports Association (DBS), has called
for a "fair solution" to the situation. "To shut out people in a
current Paralympic cycle is unacceptable."
Real inclusion There are around 2,500 active wheelchair
basketball players in Germany, and around 80% of them are paraplegic. For many
years, wheelchair basketball has been seen as exemplary in terms of its
inclusion - men and women play together, as do people with and without
handicaps. There's a points system in place to make sure the sport is run
fairly. One point is given to those athletes who are severely disabled (e.g.
paraplegic), while 4.5 points are for someone with a minimal disability (e.g.
limited movement in hips, knees or ankles) and, in many competitions, even
those without a handicap. The total number of points in a five-person team
cannot be more than 14 in an international team and 14.5 in a club team.
Amputation? "Our society keeps being more inclusive. The perspective that only wheelchair users can play wheelchair sports is narrow-minded," said Miller. Her sport shows that it can be different, which makes the IPC's stance all the more unfortunate. "Tougher guidelines for wheelchair basketball makes it worse." The IPC's classification system needs to be "discussed as soon as possible," she adds. "The Paralympic Games will only hurt itself in the long run if they become more and more exclusive." One of the nine newly excluded international wheelchair basketball players is Briton George Bates, who has battled Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) since his childhood. Doctors told him one option was to amputate the leg, which causes him chronic pain. "As a result of the decision by the IPC I could be forced into reconsidering this heartbreaking option [amputation]," the 26-year-old said (see tweet above). First though, Bates wants to fight against his expulsion. Editorial note: The IPC have yet to respond to DW's request for a comment.
^ This is a very confusing and
chaotic situation: for a Government or Organization to determine how “disabled”
you are and what percentage should be allowed. I would like to see anyone who is
even slightly disabled be given Disability Benefits or included in Disability-related
events and programs. I know that is not likely to happen anytime soon. The
debate on who is and who isn’t disabled isn’t going to go away and all sides involved
need to come to a general agreement sooner rather than later because the
disabled deserve that. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/wheelchair-basketball-how-disabled-do-you-have-to-be/a-54406662
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