IPC, JPA partner in staging Caribbean Para Forum and Camp
The Jamaica Paralympic Association (JPA) in a historic move will, between Mach 13 and 15, host a regional training camp and classification as well as technical courses for Caribbean stakeholders in the sports of athletics and boccia.
Over 70 stakeholders are expected to assemble in Kingston to participate in educational and practical sessions, which are being sponsored by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), the global governing body for para sport.
JPA President Christopher Samuda, in commenting on what will be a milestone event, said, “The JPA/IPC partnership is symbolic of mutual confidence in Jamaica’s vision which goes beyond the shoreline of Jamaica as we are committed to building Caribbean capacity in para sports and institutionalising a pathway for regional coaches and technical officials to be the engines of development and to become pacesetters, while at the same time maturing and transitioning talent.”
The local apex body has in recent years expanded the menu of para sports to include boccia, archery, surfing, fencing, pistol shooting, and cycling and has enabled medal performances by athletes in taekwondo and judo in regional games as well as international tournaments staged by the respective international federations, whose success led to their transitioning to the Paralympic stage in Tokyo.
Well-decorated Paralympian, and now JPA sports manager, Neville Sinclair, underscores that “the local para sport movement has long ago moved from being only track and field to having several successful sports on the agenda and that is forward progress.”
Sinclair’s view coincides with Samuda’s vision of sport development.
“Sport development must be holistic and to be viable, the plan must have inbuilt strategies and activations across the board of sports in affording a myriad of options for youth engagement, in ensuring the deepening and sustainability of the talent pool and in achieving, ultimately, diversification of the sport economy and brand commercialisation,” he said.
Stakeholders from 13 countries will pursue in earnest aspirations in becoming world-certified para coaches as well as global classifiers, technical officials and interest in the medical field locally is noticeably growing.
“The JPA will continue to professionalise the delivery of para sport and it begins with an investment in character, values and competencies, for in the absence of capitalising the human capital, the spend will be spent,” Samuda added.