<p>The Tokyo Paralympics open Tuesday after a year-long pandemic delay and with the virus continuing to cast a long shadow as Japan battles a record surge in cases.</p>.<p>As at the Olympics, the event will be marked by strict virus rules, with almost all spectators banned and tough restrictions on athletes and other participants.</p>.<p>While a swell of domestic support emerged during the Olympics after months of negative polls, there is deep concern in Japan as the Paralympics approach with the country going through a fifth virus wave.</p>.<p>More than 25,000 new cases were recorded on Thursday, and medics across the country have warned hospitals are at breaking point with serious cases also at record highs.</p>.<p>It's a challenging environment for the most important sports event for disabled athletes, and International Paralympic Committee chief Andrew Parsons has warned participants against complacency.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/paralympic-flame-arrives-in-tokyo-as-coronavirus-surges-days-before-opening-1021745.html" target="_blank">Read | Paralympic flame arrives in Tokyo as coronavirus surges days before opening</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite the backdrop, IPC officials insist the reach of the event will be "incredible".</p>.<p>"Of course the fact that we will not have spectators at the venues is a challenge," Parsons told AFP in an interview.</p>.<p>"But we believe we will reach more than four billion people through broadcasting."</p>.<p>Local officials say the Games can be held safely, with athletes and other participants subject to the same anti-infection rules that applied to the Olympics.</p>.<p>Competitors can only enter the Paralympic Village shortly before their event and must leave within 48 hours of the end of their competition.</p>.<p>They will be tested daily and limited to moving between training venues, competition sites and the Village.</p>.<p>The measures are intended to prevent the Games from becoming a superspreader event -- and officials say the Olympics proved the restrictions work.</p>.<p>There were 552 positive cases linked to the Olympics reported from July 1 until Saturday, the majority among Japan residents employed by the Games or working as contractors.</p>.<p>So far, 107 cases related to the Paralympics have been confirmed.</p>.<p>But Olympic officials say there is no evidence of infection spreading from the Games to the rest of Japan, where case numbers were already on the rise.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/first-covid-19-case-reported-in-paralympic-village-1021261.html" target="_blank">Read | First Covid-19 case reported in Paralympic Village</a></strong></p>.<p>Still organisers acknowledge the worsening environment.</p>.<p>"The infection situation today is different to how it was before the Olympics. It has deteriorated," said Tokyo 2020 official Hidemasa Nakamura on Friday.</p>.<p>"And the local medical system is also in a very tight situation."</p>.<p>The virus surge has caused tensions, with some local regions and schools cancelling planned trips to Games events despite support for the programme from Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike.</p>.<p>The mood among Paralympians remains buoyant though, after the uncertainties of the year-long delay.</p>.<p>"It's our time to take aim at gold!" tweeted US archer Matt Stutzman, a Paralympic silver medallist who uses the handle "Armless Archer".</p>.<p>Stutzman is among those likely to be appearing on the medal podium during the Games, which will see 4,400 athletes from around 160 national teams competing.</p>.<p>There are 22 sports, with athletes competing in different categories and classes depending on the nature of their disability. Badminton and taekwondo are appearing for the first time.</p>.<p>Top names include Germany's Markus Rehm, dubbed the "Blade Jumper" for his gravity-defying feats in long jump, which have earned him three gold medals and a bronze.</p>.<p>He has pushed to be included in the Olympics, but so far without success over concerns that his prosthetic blade gives him an advantage.</p>.<p>Other household names include Tatyana McFadden, the American wheelchair racer who will be competing in her fifth summer Paralympics.</p>.<p>She also appeared at the Sochi Winter Games, where she won a silver medal in the country where she was born, as her adoptive US mother and Russian birth mother cheered her on.</p>.<p>Japan will be hoping it can repeat the gold rush that saw it bring home a record 58 gold Olympic medals.</p>.<p>Among its top medal hopes is Shingo Kuneida, the reigning world number one wheelchair men's single champion and considered one of the greatest figures in the sport.</p>
<p>The Tokyo Paralympics open Tuesday after a year-long pandemic delay and with the virus continuing to cast a long shadow as Japan battles a record surge in cases.</p>.<p>As at the Olympics, the event will be marked by strict virus rules, with almost all spectators banned and tough restrictions on athletes and other participants.</p>.<p>While a swell of domestic support emerged during the Olympics after months of negative polls, there is deep concern in Japan as the Paralympics approach with the country going through a fifth virus wave.</p>.<p>More than 25,000 new cases were recorded on Thursday, and medics across the country have warned hospitals are at breaking point with serious cases also at record highs.</p>.<p>It's a challenging environment for the most important sports event for disabled athletes, and International Paralympic Committee chief Andrew Parsons has warned participants against complacency.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/paralympic-flame-arrives-in-tokyo-as-coronavirus-surges-days-before-opening-1021745.html" target="_blank">Read | Paralympic flame arrives in Tokyo as coronavirus surges days before opening</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite the backdrop, IPC officials insist the reach of the event will be "incredible".</p>.<p>"Of course the fact that we will not have spectators at the venues is a challenge," Parsons told AFP in an interview.</p>.<p>"But we believe we will reach more than four billion people through broadcasting."</p>.<p>Local officials say the Games can be held safely, with athletes and other participants subject to the same anti-infection rules that applied to the Olympics.</p>.<p>Competitors can only enter the Paralympic Village shortly before their event and must leave within 48 hours of the end of their competition.</p>.<p>They will be tested daily and limited to moving between training venues, competition sites and the Village.</p>.<p>The measures are intended to prevent the Games from becoming a superspreader event -- and officials say the Olympics proved the restrictions work.</p>.<p>There were 552 positive cases linked to the Olympics reported from July 1 until Saturday, the majority among Japan residents employed by the Games or working as contractors.</p>.<p>So far, 107 cases related to the Paralympics have been confirmed.</p>.<p>But Olympic officials say there is no evidence of infection spreading from the Games to the rest of Japan, where case numbers were already on the rise.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/first-covid-19-case-reported-in-paralympic-village-1021261.html" target="_blank">Read | First Covid-19 case reported in Paralympic Village</a></strong></p>.<p>Still organisers acknowledge the worsening environment.</p>.<p>"The infection situation today is different to how it was before the Olympics. It has deteriorated," said Tokyo 2020 official Hidemasa Nakamura on Friday.</p>.<p>"And the local medical system is also in a very tight situation."</p>.<p>The virus surge has caused tensions, with some local regions and schools cancelling planned trips to Games events despite support for the programme from Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike.</p>.<p>The mood among Paralympians remains buoyant though, after the uncertainties of the year-long delay.</p>.<p>"It's our time to take aim at gold!" tweeted US archer Matt Stutzman, a Paralympic silver medallist who uses the handle "Armless Archer".</p>.<p>Stutzman is among those likely to be appearing on the medal podium during the Games, which will see 4,400 athletes from around 160 national teams competing.</p>.<p>There are 22 sports, with athletes competing in different categories and classes depending on the nature of their disability. Badminton and taekwondo are appearing for the first time.</p>.<p>Top names include Germany's Markus Rehm, dubbed the "Blade Jumper" for his gravity-defying feats in long jump, which have earned him three gold medals and a bronze.</p>.<p>He has pushed to be included in the Olympics, but so far without success over concerns that his prosthetic blade gives him an advantage.</p>.<p>Other household names include Tatyana McFadden, the American wheelchair racer who will be competing in her fifth summer Paralympics.</p>.<p>She also appeared at the Sochi Winter Games, where she won a silver medal in the country where she was born, as her adoptive US mother and Russian birth mother cheered her on.</p>.<p>Japan will be hoping it can repeat the gold rush that saw it bring home a record 58 gold Olympic medals.</p>.<p>Among its top medal hopes is Shingo Kuneida, the reigning world number one wheelchair men's single champion and considered one of the greatest figures in the sport.</p>