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Magu leads Kenya’s assault at the Para Powerlifting World Cup in Georgia

Wawira, 32, is the highest-ranked Kenyan in ninth place in her category.

In Summary

•Magu, 37, leads a team of four power-lifters to a week-long event in Georgia, a country at the intersection of Europe and Asia, and a former Soviet republic.

•The team includes the 20212 Tokyo Olympians Hellen Wawira, a lightweight bronze medallist from the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Hellen Wawira during training
Hellen Wawira during training
Image: HANDOUT

The 2016 Rio Paralympian Gabriel Magu will lead Kenya’s assault at the Para Powerlifting World Cup in Tbilisi, Georgia.

The World Cup is the last qualifying round for para powerlifters for the 2024 Paris Paralympics scheduled from August 28 to September 8 in the French capital.

Magu, 37, leads a team of four power-lifters to a week-long event in Georgia, a country at the intersection of Europe and Asia, and a former Soviet republic.

The team includes the 20212 Tokyo Olympians Hellen Wawira, a lightweight bronze medallist from the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Besides Wawira, who will compete in up to women’s 41kg and Magu in men’s 72 kg, Jeremiah Ngungi and Joyce Njuguna, will be eying their first Paralympics titles from the Tbilisi event.

The Kenya National Paralympic Committee (KNPC) secretary general, Stanley Mutuma, disclosed that those winning medals at the championships will get direct tickets to the Paris Summer Games.

“A good performance will also see the powerlifters improve their world ranking, which is also one of the bases used to qualify,” said Mutuma.  He added that a top-eight eight ranking after the championships will secure someone a place at the Paris Games.

Wawira, the 2022 Commonwealth Games lightweight bronze medallist, is hoping to qualify for her second Paralympic Games after competing at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.

Wawira, 32, is the highest-ranked Kenyan in ninth place in her category.

Wawira’s run at the 2021 Tokyo Paralympics ended in fifth place in the 41kg after benching 93 kg. It’s the Chinese who won gold in 108kg.

Magu, who is the Team captain, is eying his second Paralympics after his debut at the 2016 Rio Paralympics, having won silver at the American Para Powerlifting Championships 2018.

Gabriel Magu lifts the weights under the supervision of his coach in a recent training session
Gabriel Magu lifts the weights under the supervision of his coach in a recent training session

Magu, 37, has been to two World Cup events in 2016 in Malaysia and 2020 in Nigeria and the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. 

“I have been working hard all through this year, improving on my lifting techniques. Hope for the best,” said Magu, who has a personal best of 150kg and is currently 23rd in the up to 72kgs.

Njuguna, a 2014 Commonwealth Games bronze medallist, hit the peak of her career when she won two medals; gold and bronze from the World Championships in Dubai in 2023.

Njunguna is currently ranked 18th in 79kg and has a silver from the World Cup in Nigeria in 2020.

Maringa, who won bronze at the World Championships Cup in Egypt in March this year, hopes to replicate the feat in Tbilisi and punch the ticket to Paris. Maringa is ranked 21st and has a career-best of 137kg in the 54kg category.

So far seven Kenyans have qualified for the 2024 Paris Paralympics. They include Kennedy Ogada in para-cycling, Asiya Sururu (para-rowing) and Stacy Neema and Julieta Moipo (taekwondo).

The rest are from Athletics-Tokyo Paralympics 1,500m bronze medallist Nancy Chelangat (1,500 T11), Mary Waithera (1,500 T11) and Wesley Sang (1,500 T46) in athletics.

Mutuma said eight Kenyan athletes have been lined up for qualification through high-performance ranking following their performance at the World Para-Athletics Championships held last month in Kobe, Japan.