Gazan vows to bring home gold

0
141

After winning medals in Arab and international competitions, Gaza Paralympian athlete Khamis Zaqout is hoping to set a new world record when he competes in the London Games. Zaqout, a 47-year-old father of nine who comes from Khan Yunis refugee camp in southern Gaza, will participate in three disciplines — shot, discus and javelin — after qualifying earlier this year.
A construction worker by trade, Zaqout had a bad accident while working in Israel in 1992 which left him partially paralysed and confined to a wheelchair. In his late 20s at the time, he was sent to the West Bank for treatment at the Khalil Abu Raya Rehabilitation Centre in the West Bank city of Ramallah where he spent several years learning how to live with his disability.
It was there that he began playing basketball and swimming. “I started in 1992 at the Abu Raya Rehabilitation Centre where we later started doing sports for the physically disabled in Palestine,” says Zaqout, who quickly excelled at wheelchair basketball. “I was exceptional among the athletes and then I was made team captain,” he says. Two years later, Zaqout took part in the Paralympic qualifiers in Iran where his team came sixth in wheelchair basketball. The next year, Zaqout changed track after talks with his coaches, switching to the disciplines of shot, discus and javelin.
Following nearly two decades of training, during which the stocky Gazan took part in multiple international sporting events, Zaqout finally achieved his long-awaited dream in March during the Paralympic qualifiers in Dubai. “I set a new (shot) world record of 11.4 metres,” he says of the competition, which saw him return home with five gold medals in shot, discus and javelin.
With the London tournament set to begin in just days, Zaqout is now eyeing the ultimate trophy — a Paralympic gold. Palestinian athletes have never won any medals in the Olympic Games but have managed to win three medals in the Paralympics — a bronze for shot from Sydney in 2000, and two more from the 2004 Athens Games: a silver for shot and bronze for longjump. This year, Zaqout, who competes in class 55/56 for wheelchair athletes who throw from a seated position, is one of just two Palestinians taking part in the 2012 Paralympics which begin on August 29. His co-competitor is Mohammed Fannouna, a 32-year-old partially-sighted long jumper, who took home a bronze from Athens for a jump measuring 6.59 metres. Fannouna, who competes in class 13 for athletes with a visual impairment, is also to participate in the 100 and 200 metres, as well the javelin.
Zaqout says Palestinian athletes face huge obstacles when training to compete at such a high international level, since they suffer from a lack of equipment and woefully inadequate facilities. Although athletes and sportsmen across the occupied territories are affected by the financial crisis facing the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority as well as Gaza’s Hamas rulers, the situation is much tougher for those living in Gaza, which has been subjected to an Israeli blockade since 2006. “We don’t have the basic rights of any athlete,” says Zaqout, who was barred by Israel from leaving Gaza in early June to attend a pre-Olympics celebration organised by the British Consulate in Jerusalem and Ramallah. “We don’t have proper sports equipment, or training grounds — or even wheelchairs,” he explained.
“Each player should have at least 10 javelins but we have six people training with only four. And our team only has five discuses instead of a minimum of 20.” In the run-up to the Games, Team Palestine spent 10 days training in Qatar before flying to London on August 23.