<p>The Tokyo 2020 Paralympics open on August 24, after a year-long pandemic delay and under strict virus rules, including a ban on almost all spectators.</p>.<p>Here are some questions and answers about the Games and how the event will unfold in Tokyo:</p>.<p>The first Paralympic Games took place in 1960 in Rome, featuring just 400 athletes from 23 countries.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/spectator-ban-no-barrier-for-paralympics-ipc-chief-andrew-parsons-1020984.html" target="_blank">Spectator ban no barrier for Paralympics: IPC chief Andrew Parsons</a></strong></p>.<p>The name Paralympics is intended to indicate an event happening in parallel, alongside the Olympics.</p>.<p>It grew from the Stoke Mandeville Games, a tournament organised in Britain in 1948 for 16 male and female wheelchair athletes, some of them World War II veterans.</p>.<p>It was the idea of Sir Ludwig Guttmann, who oversaw the spinal injuries unit at a hospital in Stoke Mandeville that treated veterans.</p>.<p>A total of 22 sports will be contested at the Games, including new additions badminton and taekwondo.</p>.<p>Most sports are common to the Olympics and Paralympics, including athletics and swimming.</p>.<p>Some that feature in both Games involve modifications in their Paralympic form, like wheelchair rugby.</p>.<p>Two sports, boccia and goalball, are unique to the Paralympics.</p>.<p>Paralympians compete in different categories within a given sport based on their particular impairment.</p>.<p>The Paralympic movement covers 10 impairment types that fall broadly into three categories: physical impairments, vision impairment and intellectual impairment.</p>.<p>Some sports are open to athletes in all categories, while others are reserved for specific impairments.</p>.<p>Within each category, athletes are assessed to see whether they meet a minimum impairment level, to ensure a fair playing field -- although there have been controversies over some placements in recent years.</p>.<p>In some sports like athletics, they are placed in a certain sports class, again pitting them against athletes with similar impairments to ensure equity.</p>.<p>Athletes may be reclassified over their lifetime as their situation changes.</p>.<p>Like at the Olympics, most events will take place behind closed doors to minimise infection risks.</p>.<p>An exception is being made for a programme to bring schoolchildren to events, but some areas have already said they won't take part because of the record high infections being reported in Japan.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/paralympic-flame-arrives-in-tokyo-as-coronavirus-surges-days-before-opening-1021745.html" target="_blank">Paralympic flame arrives in Tokyo as coronavirus surges days before opening</a></strong></p>.<p>Paralympians will face strict measures during their stay, and are allowed to move only between their accommodation, training sites and Games venues.</p>.<p>They will be tested daily, with confirmed positive cases put into isolation and unable to compete.</p>.<p>Tokyo, which is the first city to host the Paralympics twice, will welcome 4,400 athletes from around 160 countries and territories.</p>.<p>Just a week before the Games, Afghanistan's team -- made up of two Para athletes -- announced they would not be able to take part because of the turmoil in the country.</p>.<p>The Games will feature a refugee team composed of six Para athletes, including Alia Issa, the first woman refugee Para athlete.</p>.<p>China has dominated the gold medal table since Athens 2004, with Britain often in second place and the United States and Ukraine battling it out for third.</p>.<p>Assistants are used by some Paralympians with vision impairments.</p>.<p>For example, "guide runners" can be attached to an athlete by a strap on their arms or hands, but the athlete must finish ahead of the guide.</p>.<p>Some visually impaired cyclists also pair up with a guide who rides in front in a tandem and is known as a pilot.</p>.<p>And for visually impaired swimmers there are "tappers" -- assistants who tap the athlete's head or body as they approach turns or the finish to keep them safe.</p>.<p>In some sports, like Para athletics track, there are multiple sport classes for athletes with different types of impairment competing in a single event.</p>.<p>For example, the Rio Games featured 16 men's and 14 women's 100 metres gold medals across a range of classes.</p>
<p>The Tokyo 2020 Paralympics open on August 24, after a year-long pandemic delay and under strict virus rules, including a ban on almost all spectators.</p>.<p>Here are some questions and answers about the Games and how the event will unfold in Tokyo:</p>.<p>The first Paralympic Games took place in 1960 in Rome, featuring just 400 athletes from 23 countries.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/spectator-ban-no-barrier-for-paralympics-ipc-chief-andrew-parsons-1020984.html" target="_blank">Spectator ban no barrier for Paralympics: IPC chief Andrew Parsons</a></strong></p>.<p>The name Paralympics is intended to indicate an event happening in parallel, alongside the Olympics.</p>.<p>It grew from the Stoke Mandeville Games, a tournament organised in Britain in 1948 for 16 male and female wheelchair athletes, some of them World War II veterans.</p>.<p>It was the idea of Sir Ludwig Guttmann, who oversaw the spinal injuries unit at a hospital in Stoke Mandeville that treated veterans.</p>.<p>A total of 22 sports will be contested at the Games, including new additions badminton and taekwondo.</p>.<p>Most sports are common to the Olympics and Paralympics, including athletics and swimming.</p>.<p>Some that feature in both Games involve modifications in their Paralympic form, like wheelchair rugby.</p>.<p>Two sports, boccia and goalball, are unique to the Paralympics.</p>.<p>Paralympians compete in different categories within a given sport based on their particular impairment.</p>.<p>The Paralympic movement covers 10 impairment types that fall broadly into three categories: physical impairments, vision impairment and intellectual impairment.</p>.<p>Some sports are open to athletes in all categories, while others are reserved for specific impairments.</p>.<p>Within each category, athletes are assessed to see whether they meet a minimum impairment level, to ensure a fair playing field -- although there have been controversies over some placements in recent years.</p>.<p>In some sports like athletics, they are placed in a certain sports class, again pitting them against athletes with similar impairments to ensure equity.</p>.<p>Athletes may be reclassified over their lifetime as their situation changes.</p>.<p>Like at the Olympics, most events will take place behind closed doors to minimise infection risks.</p>.<p>An exception is being made for a programme to bring schoolchildren to events, but some areas have already said they won't take part because of the record high infections being reported in Japan.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/paralympic-flame-arrives-in-tokyo-as-coronavirus-surges-days-before-opening-1021745.html" target="_blank">Paralympic flame arrives in Tokyo as coronavirus surges days before opening</a></strong></p>.<p>Paralympians will face strict measures during their stay, and are allowed to move only between their accommodation, training sites and Games venues.</p>.<p>They will be tested daily, with confirmed positive cases put into isolation and unable to compete.</p>.<p>Tokyo, which is the first city to host the Paralympics twice, will welcome 4,400 athletes from around 160 countries and territories.</p>.<p>Just a week before the Games, Afghanistan's team -- made up of two Para athletes -- announced they would not be able to take part because of the turmoil in the country.</p>.<p>The Games will feature a refugee team composed of six Para athletes, including Alia Issa, the first woman refugee Para athlete.</p>.<p>China has dominated the gold medal table since Athens 2004, with Britain often in second place and the United States and Ukraine battling it out for third.</p>.<p>Assistants are used by some Paralympians with vision impairments.</p>.<p>For example, "guide runners" can be attached to an athlete by a strap on their arms or hands, but the athlete must finish ahead of the guide.</p>.<p>Some visually impaired cyclists also pair up with a guide who rides in front in a tandem and is known as a pilot.</p>.<p>And for visually impaired swimmers there are "tappers" -- assistants who tap the athlete's head or body as they approach turns or the finish to keep them safe.</p>.<p>In some sports, like Para athletics track, there are multiple sport classes for athletes with different types of impairment competing in a single event.</p>.<p>For example, the Rio Games featured 16 men's and 14 women's 100 metres gold medals across a range of classes.</p>