In wheelchair, paraplegic Lai Chi-wai climbs a skyscraper in Hong Kong : The Tribune India

In wheelchair, paraplegic Lai Chi-wai climbs a skyscraper in Hong Kong

The event raised $670,639 in donations for spinal cord patients.

In wheelchair, paraplegic Lai Chi-wai climbs a skyscraper in Hong Kong

Lai Chi-wai, a paraplegic climber, attends a training session, ahead of his attempt to climb the 320-metre tall Nina Tower. (REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)



Hong Kong, January 17

Lai Chi-wai became the first in Hong Kong to climb more than 250 metres of a skyscraper while strapped into a wheelchair as he pulled himself up for more than 10 hours on Saturday to raise money for spinal cord patients.

The 37-year-old climber, whose car accident 10 years ago left him paralysed from the waist down, could not make it to the top of the 300 metre-tall Nina Tower on the Kowloon peninsula.

“I was quite scared,” Lai said. “Climbing up a mountain, I can hold onto rocks or little holes, but with glass, all I can really rely on is the rope that I’m hanging off.” The event raised HK$5.2 million ($670,639) in donations.

Lai, before 2011, was crowned Asia champion four times for rock climbing and at one point ranked eighth globally.

After his accident, he resumed climbing by attaching his wheelchair to a pulley system. Five years ago he ascended the 495-metre high Lion Rock mountain, a local folk culture symbol of Hong Kong’s strength and grit.

“Apart from just living, I wondered what drives me? So I began to chase that, knowing that there was a possibility I could climb mountains, even in a wheelchair,” Lai said.

“In a way, I forgot that I was a disabled person, I could still dream and I could still do what I liked doing.” Although he did not make it to the top of the skyscraper, due to safety concerns, Lai hoped to send a message.

“Some people don’t understand the difficulties of disabled people, some people think that we are always weak, we need help, we need assistance, we need people’s pity,” Lai said.

“But, I want to tell everyone, it doesn’t have to be like that. If a disabled person can shine, they can at the same time bring about opportunity, hope, bring about light, they don’t have to be viewed as weak.”—Reuters

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