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Tributes to Hawking as curtain falls on Games

By AFP
March 19, 2018

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea: The Pyeongchang Winter Paralympics closed Sunday with a dazzling ceremony featuring light shows, dancing and music, as well as tributes to late wheelchair-bound British physicist Stephen Hawking as an “inspiration”.

Nine days of sporting action ended earlier in the day with a flurry of events, including victory for the United States in a hard-fought sledge hockey final, helping them to top the medals table with 36 overall.

North Korea’s athletes, who made their country’s Winter Paralympics debut in Pyeongchang, were absent from the closing ceremony after heading home early, but it was a minor sticking point after the rapid inter-Korean thaw of recent weeks.

With thousands packing out the Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium, International Paralympic Committee president Andrew Parsons used his closing address to pay tribute to Hawking, who died last week aged 76.

The scientist is seen as an inspiration by Paralympians. He never let his acute physical disability stop him from pursuing his dreams, and is fondly remembered for opening the London 2012 Games.

Parsons hailed him as “a genius of a man, a pioneer and inspiration to us all”.“While Hawking tested the limits of his imagination, Paralympians, you have once again pushed the boundaries of human endeavour,” he said.

“Your logic-defying performances have focused the world not on what holds you back, but on what motivates you and pushes you forward.”

Hawking developed a form of motor neurone disease in his 20s that left him confined to a wheelchair, almost completely paralysed and only able to speak through a voice synthesiser.But his disability did not stop him pursuing his ambition of unlocking the secrets of the Universe, and his best-selling book “A Brief History of Time” made him a household name.