Bahrain at the Paralympics

Bahrain at the
Paralympics
IPC code BRN
NPC Bahrain Disabled Sports Federation
Medals
Gold Silver Bronze Total
0 0 0 0
Summer appearances

Bahrain made its Paralympic Games début the same year as its Olympic début, at the 1984 Summer Paralympics in Stoke Mandeville and New York City, sending a delegation to compete in track and field. The country has participated in every subsequent edition of the Summer Paralympics, but has never taken part in the Winter Paralympics.[1]

Bahraini competitors have won a total of nine Paralympic medals, all of them in track and field: one gold, three silver and five bronze. The country's inaugural participation in the Games yielded two bronze medals, when K. Alqatam finished third in the men's javelin (category 5), and Adel Sultan finished third in the men's 100m sprint (category 5). Bahrain won its first (and so far only) gold medal four years later, with Khaled Al Saqer winning the men's slalom in the 1A category. His compatriot Ali Alhasan took bronze in the same event, while Adel Sultan provided a silver medal in the 100m sprint (categories 5-6). In 1992, Al Saqer won the country's only medal, a bronze in the discus (THW2-3). There was no medals in 1996, but in 2000 Ayman Al Heddi and Ahmed Kamal obtained a silver and a bronze, respectively, in the discus and the shot put. Ahmed Meshaima's silver in the shot put (F37) is Bahrain's most recent medal to date; the country failed to make it onto the medal chart with its small delegation of three athletes in 2008.[2]

Three women have represented Bahrain at the Paralympics: M. Alkhinna and S. Mohamed in sprinting and slalom in 2004; and Fatema Nedham in the discus in 2008.[3] Bahraini women's participation in the Paralympics thus predates their participation in the Olympics, which began in 2004.[4]

See also

References

  1. Bahrain at the Paralympics, International Paralympic Committee
  2. Bahrain at the Paralympics, International Paralympic Committee
  3. Bahrain at the Paralympics, International Paralympic Committee
  4. "Running into History", ESPN, September 25, 2004


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