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Wednesday, October 18
Paralympics open in a blaze of light


SYDNEY, Australia -- Rain that threatened to spoil the celebration held off Wednesday for the 11th Paralympics to open with a big party.

Paralympic
Huge fish float above the crowd during the opening ceremony of the Paralympic Games in Sydney Wednesday.
The biggest Paralympics picked up where the Sydney Games, the biggest of the modern Olympic era, ended 17 days earlier -- in a vibrant spectacle of dance, music and Aussie icons.

Thousands of glowing flashlights inside the stadium compensated for the starry cosmos that usually backlights the Southern Cross constellation that was hidden behind overcast skies.

Gray clouds hung menacingly over the city all day and weather forecasters had predicted heavy rain and strong winds during the evening, but it never rained.

Another full-scale party was already in full swing by the time governor general Sir William Deane declared the games open and swimmer Tracey Cross read the oath.

In his opening address, International Paralympic Committee president Robert Steadward paid tribute to the unparalleled success of the Olympic Games, then promised more of the same.

"The way has been paved for our Paralympians to make their mark on sporting history," Steadward said.

"The Paralympic Games are about sport, culture and fellowship, so we will spend the next 10 days enjoying the spirit of fair play and sportsmanship exhibited by our athletes."

About 4,000 athletes from 121 nations walked or rolled their wheelchairs onto the running track at Stadium Australia.

Some athletes spun their wheelchairs around in 360-degree wheelies and others performed handstands and somersaults up the main straight, raising thunderous cheers.

"Aussie, Aussie, Aussie: Oi, Oi, Oi!!" rang out as an almost capacity crowd welcomed the athletes.

But the loudest cheer was saved for the Australians -- the biggest team at these games -- when their more than 200 athletes, some with the national flag painted on their faces, entered the arena behind the other delegations.

Calypso music was drowned out by beating drums and the screams of more than 95,000 spectators, all either standing, jumping or dancing, as the letters A.U.S.T.R.A.L.I.A appeared on a giant video screen over a background of aboriginal designs.

From the middle of the infield, wheelchair athlete Louise Sauvage ignited a mini cauldron that emerged from under a raised platform.

Sauvage, a multiple Paralympic gold medalist and three-time winner of the Boston Marathon, was the last of six torchbearers of the Paralympic flame inside the main stadium.

The spark from the cauldron grew with a flame-throwing effect, triggering a series of relay flames that swept across the field and up to the cauldron at the north end of the stadium -- the same cauldron that held the Olympic flame.

Continuing a theme of reconciliation between indigenous and nonindigenous Australians, the ceremony commenced with a welcome by Rod Towney, chairman of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.

Indigenous band Yothu Yindi performed its signature song "Treaty" on a stage in front of images of Australia's red center shining off a 70-foot long video screen.

Organizers had expected a sellout crowd of 100,000, but the uncertain conditions meant hundreds of seats were vacant when the ceremony started.

Earlier, stadium staff worked feverishly to drain pools of water from the arena floor and off fiber-cement platforms that had to be coated and re-coated with paint throughout the three-hour spectacular.

International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch, who satisfied Sydneysiders with his "best ever" rating of the 2000 Sydney Games, returned as a guest of the International Paralympic Committee.

Samaranch said he expected the Paralympics to be just as successful as the Olympics because many of the same organizers and volunteers were involved.

Competition in five of the 18 sports starts Thursday.


 

ALSO SEE
East Timor's tiny Paralympic team gets warm welcome

Paralympians seek to rid Cambodia of land mines




   
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