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Destination Vancouver: Armenian Squad Departs For 2010 Paralympics

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  • Destination Vancouver: Armenian Squad Departs For 2010 Paralympics

    DESTINATION VANCOUVER: ARMENIAN SQUAD DEPARTS FOR 2010 PARALYMPICS
    Hrant Katarikyan

    http://hetq.am/en/sport/27906/
    2010/03 /04 | 13:59

    By a stroke of pure luck and dogged determination, a five member
    Armenian delegation leaves Yerevan today headed for Vancouver, Canada,
    to participate in the 2010 Paralympics. The games will host 1,000
    disabled athletes from 40 nations.

    Hakob Abrahamyan, President of the Armenian National Paralympics
    Committee, is heading the delegation comprised of two athletes, a
    trainer and a translator. Mr. Abrahamyan said Armenian participation
    in the Paralympics dates back to the 1998 games in Nagano, Japan. He
    was quick to point out, however, that the road has been a rocky one
    and that they are still overlooked by the Armenian government in
    terms of support and financing.

    I had the good fortune to meet Hakob, who also runs the "Pyunik";
    an NGO focusing on the needs of Armenia's disabled, a week ago. At
    the time, he wasn't sure if the squad would be going. The problem
    was finances.

    The Armenian Paralympics Committee receives 3 million AMD from the
    government yearly. That translates into about an $8,000 budget that has
    to cover everything - training, equipment, travel expenses and more.

    Wanting to show just how little that was, Hakob told me, "You know
    that 3 million AMD equals the salary of one cleaner on the Azerbaijani
    team." He said that that Azerbaijani Paralympics Committee enjoys a
    yearly budget of $2 million - half from the government and half from
    wealthy oil sponsors.

    Hakob called me on Tuesday to say that the team was going to
    Vancouver. It seems that at the last minute they found some sponsors
    to cover the travel expenses. I visited the Pyunik office situated
    in a red-tufa building in the shadow of the Tzitzernakaberd Genocide
    Memorial outside Yerevan.

    It turns out that while the team was training in Tzaghkadzor, a winter
    ski resort used to train athletes back in the Soviet era, they bumped
    into former RoA President Robert Kocharyan. Hakob told me that the
    ex-president had assisted them in the past and agreed to do so again.

    The team also received some last minute financing from Ardshinvest
    Bank.

    "It's funny how things worked out. There we were training at
    Tzaghkadzor and we even had to pay for our own lift tickets. They
    charge 7,500 AMD for ten rides up the mountain. We couldn't even get
    any discounts at first. Like anything else in Armenia, it's who you
    know," Hakob said.

    After arriving at Pyunik, I met the other members of the team heading
    to Vancouver.

    Mher Avanesyan, a 28 year-old veteran of previous Paralympic Games,
    hails from the village of Mokhratagh in the Martakert region of
    Karabakh. He lost both arms in a freak electric accident. Tall, lanky
    and somewhat reserved, Mher confessed that he started training for
    the Games late this time around.

    "Of course, I'm determined to do my best, as always. It's just that
    the less you train the harder it is to make the grade. We have to get
    by on a shoe-string budget and that just makes matters worse," he said.

    Garush Danielyan, the team's trainer, is from Spitak. He lost one
    leg in the earthquake and participated in the Winter Paralympics at
    Nagano and Salt Lake City as an athlete before turning trainer.

    "All of our athletes participate with white cards. It means none
    have international ranking since our guys don't have the chance
    to participate in European and other competitions between the
    Paralympics. There's little government backing. In fact some at
    the Ministry of Sport have never even heard of the Paralympics,"
    Garush said.

    Gayane Usnyan, a 25 year-old woman from Gyumri, is the other
    Armenian athlete on the squad. She also lost a leg in the 1988 Spitak
    earthquake. Despite the fact that this will be her first Paralympics,
    she didn't seem to have the jitters.

    "I want to get there and do the best I can. I have something to prove
    to myself as well," she said.

    Bothe Mher and Gayane will be competing in the Giant Slalom event
    scheduled for March 18. Mher said that he will also be participating
    in the Slalom on March 20.

    I asked Garush if he thought that Armenian T.V. would broadcast the
    Paralympics, since at least one station covered the Winter Olympics.

    "Probably not. I don't even think any of the stations know that
    Armenia will have a team there," he answered.

    Hakob showed me the outfits the team would be taking with them. The
    coats had "Armenia" emblazoned on the backs and the scarves were in
    the Armenia tri-color. "We'll look smarter than the Armenians who
    went to the regular Winter Olympics," he said boasting.

    I wanted to get a group photo of the team and had them put on the
    coats and scarves. Five Armenians heading off on an 18 hour plane
    trip to Vancouver via Paris and Toronto.

    We said our goodbyes and I wished them a safe journey and success.

    I'm confident they'll come through with flying colors.
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