Indonesia at the Paralympics

Indonesia made its Paralympic Games debut at the 1976 Summer Paralympics in Toronto, with competitors in athletics, lawn bowls, swimming and table tennis. The country has participated in every subsequent edition of the Summer Paralympics, except 1992, but has never taken part in the Winter Paralympics.[1]

Indonesia at the
Paralympics
IPC codeINA
NPCNational Paralympic Committee of Indonesia
Websitewww.npcindonesia.org (in Indonesian)
Medals
Gold
6
Silver
7
Bronze
14
Total
27
Summer appearances

As of 2020 edition, Indonesians have won a total of twenty-seven Paralympic medals: six gold, seven silver and fourteen bronze. The country's first two gold medals were won in 1976, by Itria Dini in the men's precision javelin (category F), and by Syarifuddin in the men's singles in lawn bowls (category E). Yan Soebiyanto won Indonesia's third gold medal in that same event four years later, while R.S. Arlen took gold in weightlifting, in the men's featherweight amputee category. In addition to these gold medals, Indonesians won a silver and three bronzes in 1976, and four bronze in 1980. 1984 yielded a silver medal and a bronze, but no gold, while in 1988 Indonesia won two silver medals.

After its absence in 1992, Indonesia sent significantly smaller delegations to the Paralympics, and no Indonesian won a Paralympic medal until the 2012 Paralympic Games. Indonesia sent four athletes to the 2012 Paralympic Games, and David Jacobs won bronze in the Table Tennis - Men's Individual C10 classification.

In Rio de Janeiro 2016, Indonesia got its only medal from powerlifting after Ni Nengah Widiasih successfully lifted 95 kg. She was also won silver at the 2020 Summer Paralympics in Tokyo, Japan, the first silver medalist since 1988. In the latter Games, Indonesia won two gold medals, ended a long wait gold for over 40 years. All gold medals won by Leani Ratri Oktila with her partners; Khalimatus Sadiyah in women's doubles SL3-SU5 and Hary Susanto in mixed doubles SL3-SU5; both of them became the youngest and oldest Indonesian para badminton player to win a Paralympic gold medal, respectively.

Medal tables

Medals by sports

Medals by Summer Sports

SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Badminton2226
Lawn bowls2158
Athletics1348
Weightlifting1001
Powerlifting0112
Table tennis0022
Totals (6 sports)671427

List of medalists

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 GoldItria Dini Toronto 1976 AthleticsMen's precision javelin throw F
 GoldSyarifuddin Toronto 1976 Lawn bowlsMen's singles E
 SilverAshari Toronto 1976 AthleticsMen's 100 meters E
 BronzeItria Dini Toronto 1976 AthleticsMen's shot put F
 BronzeSaneng Hanafi Toronto 1976 AthleticsMen's discus throw F
 BronzeSaneng Hanafi Toronto 1976 AthleticsMen's javelin throw F
 GoldYan Soebiyanto Arnhem 1980 Lawn bowlsMen's singles E
 GoldR.S. Arlen Arnhem 1980 WeightliftingMen's featherweight -57 kg amputee
 BronzeSigit Soepadi Arnhem 1980 Lawn bowlsMen's singles E
 BronzeSoekarsan Arnhem 1980 Lawn bowlsMen's singles F
 BronzeMoenali
Yamin Ismail
Arnhem 1980 Lawn bowlsMen's pairs C
 BronzeR.S. Arlen
Safri Tanjung
Arnhem 1980 Lawn bowlsMen's pairs D
 SilverNinik Umardiyani New York/Stoke Mandeville 1984 Lawn bowlsWomen's singles A2/4
 BronzeKurnianto
Memed Lesmana
New York/Stoke Mandeville 1984 Lawn bowlsMen's pairs A6/8
 SilverHadi Abdulaziz Seoul 1988 AthleticsMen's high jump B1
 SilverSoeparni Seoul 1988 AthleticsMen's shot put A4/A9
 BronzeDavid Jacobs London 2012 Table tennisMen's individual class 10
 BronzeNi Nengah Widiasih Rio de Janeiro 2016 PowerliftingWomen's 41 kg
 GoldLeani Ratri Oktila
Khalimatus Sadiyah
Tokyo 2020 Badminton Women's doubles SL3–SU5
 GoldHary Susanto
Leani Ratri Oktila
Tokyo 2020 Badminton Mixed doubles SL3–SU5
 SilverNi Nengah Widiasih Tokyo 2020 PowerliftingWomen's 41 kg
 SilverDheva Anrimusthi Tokyo 2020 BadmintonMen's singles SU5
 SilverLeani Ratri Oktila Tokyo 2020 BadmintonWomen's singles SL4
 BronzeSaptoyoga Purnomo Tokyo 2020 AthleticsMen's 100 meters T37
 BronzeDavid Jacobs Tokyo 2020 Table tennisMen's individual class 10
 BronzeSuryo Nugroho Tokyo 2020 BadmintonMen's singles SU5
 BronzeFredy Setiawan Tokyo 2020 BadmintonMen's singles SL4

Medals by individual

According to official data of the International Paralympic Committee. This is a list of people who have won two or more Paralympic medals for Indonesia.

Athlete Sport Years Games Gender Total
Leani Ratri Oktila Badminton2020SummerWomen2103
Itria Dini Athletics 1976SummerMen1012
R.S. Arlen Weightlifting 1980 Summer Men 1 0 0 2
Lawn bowls 0 0 1
Ni Nengah Widiasih Powerlifting 2012–2020SummerWomen0112
Saneng Hanafi Athletics 1976SummerMen0022
David Jacobs Table tennis 2012–2020SummerMen0022
  • People in bold are still active competitors

Paralympics participants

Summer Paralympics

Sport
1976

1980

1984

1988

1996

2000

2004

2008

2012

2016

2020
Athletes
Athletics 12 12 8 10 3 1 2 7 55
Archery 1 1
Badminton Not Held 7 7
Cycling Not Held 1 1
Lawn bowls 1 7 3 Not Held 11
Powerlifting Not Held 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 10
Shooting 3 2 5
Swimming 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 4 2 15
Table tennis 3 6 3 1 1 3 17
Wheelchair tennis Not Held 2 1 3
Weightlifting 2 2 Not Held 4
Total 18 29[lower-alpha 1] 12 22 1 5 3 3 4 9 23 129
Sport
1976

1980

1984

1988

1996

2000

2004

2008

2012

2016

2020
Athletes

Flag bearers

GamesSeasonFlag bearerSport
1960 Rome Summer Did not participate
1964 Tokyo
1968 Tel Aviv
1972 Heidelberg
1976 Toronto Unknown
1980 Arnhem
1984 New York/Stoke Mandeville
1988 Seoul
1992 Barcelona/Madrid Did not participate
1996 Atlanta Unknown
2000 Sydney
2004 Athens Steven Sualang Swimming
2008 Beijing Billy Zeth Makal Powerlifting
2012 London Agus Ngaimin Swimming
2016 Rio de Janeiro Swimming
2020 Tokyo Hanik Puji Astuti[lower-alpha 2] Shooting

Notes

  1. R.S. Arlen participated in two sports namely Weightlifting and Lawn bowls.
  2. Jaenal Aripin originally was also chosen as the co-flagbearer.[2] In fact, he did not carry the flag alongside Astuti at the opening ceremony.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.