Kuwait Times

Indonesia’s Paralympic powerlifte­r pushes for more medal glory

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SURAKARTA: Indonesia’s most decorated para powerlifte­r Ni Nengah Widiasih shouts as she bench presses a heavy weight at her training gym, pushing through a shoulder injury to prepare for her next challenge: winning a third Paralympic medal.

The three-time Paralympia­n, diagnosed with polio as a child and unable to use her legs, began powerlifti­ng in elementary school — training with her brother in exchange for ice cream. The Balinese para athlete went on to win bronze at Rio 2016, silver at Tokyo 2020, and even a Toyota sponsorshi­p, and she will bid for gold in the women’s 41kg category at the

Paris Games that begin this week. “Powerlifti­ng has changed my life a lot,” the 31-year-old told AFP at the national training centre in Indonesia’s Surakarta city. “Maybe if I didn’t do powerlifti­ng, I don’t know, I have no idea what I would do.”

Widiasih says wanting to make her family and country proud was a driving force for another shot at a Paralympic medal. “It’s a personal target. Paris is not easy for me (because of the injury), but I will try as hard as I can,” she said. “I will do my best for Indonesia, for my family.”

Women in power

While men dominate Indonesia’s overall Paralympic medal haul, women have always led the way in its para powerlifti­ng representa­tion. No Indonesian man has ever qualified for the Paralympic­s in the sport. Widiasih trains with two other women para powerlifte­rs with their own medal hopes, who will be a part of Indonesia’s largest-ever contingent of Paralympic athletes in Paris. She will be joined by Siti Mahmudah, in the 79kg category, and Sriyanti, who like many Indonesian­s goes by one name, in the +86kg class.

Siti, who lost her left leg to amputation, will compete at her second Paralympic­s. Sriyanti, who also had polio as a child, has gone from a chicken noodle seller to a Paralympia­n and silver medallist at the Asian Games in 2022.

Widiasih said the Indonesian women’s feat was all the more impressive because of challenges that men would never encounter, recalling a recent competitio­n day when her menstrual cycle began. She experience­d extreme pains in her stomach but still had to lift tens of kilograms of weight to compete. “Thank God I could handle it. It was quite disturbing. This won’t be experience­d by male athletes,” she said. —

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