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This may be especially true in North Korea. The country has some 1.8 million disabled people, about 7.5 percent of the population, according to the Green Tree Charity Foundation in South Korea, which bases its estimate on figures provided by the North Korean government. Defectors have reported in the past that the disabled were housed at group homes and kept out of the showcase capital of Pyongyang and other major cities, according to the South Korean government and the U.N. special rapporteur for human rights. In 2003, the country passed a law promising free medical care and special education, and in 2009 Pyongyang assured the United Nations its disabled were receiving proper care and schooling. But Kim Kyung Hwa, manager of the Green Tree foundation's planning team, says the country can barely feed its people, much less provide special care for the disabled. Green Tree sends food and supplies to North Korea's disabled, as well as sports equipment to Li and her group of disabled athletes. The foundation and a slate of other donors have helped provide the ping pong tables, barbells and other equipment that fill a Pyongyang recreation center that serves as a training facility for disabled athletes. When AP journalists visited the Taeddonggang Cultural Center for the Disabled in June, a young woman in a wheelchair was thwacking a ping pong ball fired at her by a coach while a boy fiddled with his prosthetic leg while awaiting his turn. Though these two young athletes missed their opportunity to compete in London this year, Li sees her country's first trip to the Paralympics as a "first step" toward developing a disabled sports culture in North Korea. "People can communicate through sports," she said, "and learn to feel comfortable around one another through sports."
[Associated
Press;
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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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