With no television coverage, a city-based NGO who works with the para athletes today highlighted the plight of the para athletes in India and appealed for a proper media coverage to give the athletes their due credit.
"It's really an irony that nobody in India will be able to see a medal winning feat in the Paralympics in Rio," founding member of the Civilian Welfare Foundation Suchandra Ganguly said in a press conference.
"Paralympics will go unnoticed and the athletes effort will be buried if media also choose to ignore them. We are not asking for sympathy but due coverage of their honest effort. They also give their best to win laurels for the country and it's not recreational sport," she said.
India have sent their biggest-ever contingent of 19 including three women this time, up from 10 in London four years ago when they won a silver courtesy N Girisha in men's high jump.
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"When Girisha won the silver he phoned me to say no media came to speak to him. Such was the plight," she said pointing out the media's comprehensive coverage of PV Sindhu and Sakshi Malik in Rio about a fortnight ago.
"This time we should get more than one medal and we want India to support them," she said, accompanied by Indian origin self help expert Zenji Nio, who is the official chaplain of the Rio Olympics and Paralympics.