Special
Report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- Preparations are being made to help sight- or
hearing-impaired people enjoy the Paralympics.
The official Paralympics site (en.paralympic.beijing2008.cn) has started to
offer downloads of "sign language broadcasting" software that can translate
audio into sign language performed by a three-dimensional image. This service is
expected to help the 20million hearing-impaired people in China enjoy the
Paralympics, which run from Sept. 6-17.
China also has more than 5 million blind people and 6 million with low
vision, according to the second national survey of the disabled in 2007. These
people accounted for 18 percent of the world's total visually impaired.
They will be able to "see" the Paralympics with the help of a special
theater, which has been narrating movies for blind people during the past three
years.
Verbal accounts of the Games, including such details as the expression of
the athletes, the color of their clothes and their movements, will be available
on air and online, as the Mind's Eye Theater cooperates with Beijing Radio and
other websites in broadcasting the Paralympics.
Tang Xiaoquan, executive vice-president of the Beijing Organizing Committee
of the Olympic Games and president of the executive board of the China Disabled
Person's Federation, told a press conference on Aug. 24 that assisting equipment
would be available to disabled people during the Games.
Special facilities will include refreshable Braille displays, which can be
used by blind computer users, Braille embossers and wireless hearing aids.
To ensure disabled people's free access to information, making such
services universally available in safe, convenient and efficient ways, is one
goal of the Beijing Paralympics, she said.