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Pakistan's flag-bearer Muhammad Karim leads his country's contingent during the opening ceremony of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics. PHOTO: REUTERS

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May Allah bless them with success

Olympics: A Pakistani's journey from home-made skis to Sochi

By AFP / PPI
Published: February 5, 2014

ISLAMABAD:
As a young boy, Mohammad Karim taught himself to speed over the snowy slopes of northern Pakistan on home-made skis. Now he is his country’s sole representative at the Winter Olympics.

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Growing up among some of the world’s highest mountains in the northern region of Gilgit-Baltistan, Karim caught the skiing bug early — albeit with none of the expensive kit that many Western skiers grow up with.

“I started skiing at the age of four years on wooden skis made by my uncle. Our schools were closed in the winter and skiing was the only way to spend our holidays,” he told AFP.

“We made skis ourselves and went skiing on local slopes, then later the air force organised a competition in which we learnt more and then started this profession.”

Pakistan’s ski federation is run by the air force, which stages annual competitions to recruit new talent, and it was at one of these that Karim was spotted.

Official support is important as Pakistan’s winter sports scene has been badly hit by a campaign of violence from Taliban insurgents.
In June last year 10 foreign mountaineers were massacred at the foot of the country’s second-highest peak.

As Karim’s skills progressed, in 2006 the federation paid for him to go abroad for training.

“I trained in Japan and Austria and competed in various regional and continental events which helped me mature as a skier,” he said.
Exposure to other talented skiers from around the world — instead of the boys of his village — opened Karim’s eyes to the idea of competing at international level.

“When I went to Japan for the first time in 2006 I saw many other skiers and I thought ‘I can do this’,” he said.

“Since then it was my dream to work hard and to participate in a major event.”

Now his sights are set on a top 50 finish in the giant slalom.
“I can’t wait to ski on the Sochi snow,” he said.

“I know it will be tough among the world’s best but I have practised hard and I will do my best to leave my mark at the highest level.”

Karim will be only the second Pakistani ever to compete at the winter Games following his friend Mohammad Abbas, who finished 79th in the men’s giant slalom in the 2010 Games in Vancouver.

“I was immensely happy that I was selected, especially because it is such a major event,” he said.

“I did a lot of training and physical exercise and God willing I will come below 50.”

A respectable show in Russia will raise the profile of the sport in Pakistan and, Karim hopes, encourage the government to improve the meagre facilities for skiing.

The Austrian government helped pay for a ski resort in the northwestern Swat valley in the 1980s, but the facilities were torched by the Taliban in 2008.

The air force recently built a chairlift in Karim’s home area and he urged the government to do more.

“The roads are unpaved. If the roads are paved and more people have access to the region then this game (skiing) will flourish,” he said.

Cricket-mad Pakistan may not be glued to its TV screens during Sochi. But Karim’s parents will be praying their son does the country proud.

On the Sochi flight

On Wednesday, Karim left for Sochi, Russia to participate in the Winter Olympics.

Karim is the only Pakistani player participating in giant Slalom event.

This event is scheduled to take place from February 7 to 23, in Sochi, Russia. As many as 98 events in 15 winter sport disciplines will be held during the Winter Olympics.

Chief of the Air Staff, Pakistan Air Force, Air Chief Marshal Tahir Rafique Butt, who is also the Patron-in-Chief of Ski Federation of Pakistan (SFP) expressed his best wishes for the young skier and hoped that he would perform better in the winter Olympics and bring laurels to the nation.

It is worth mentioning that Muhammad Abbas (Pakistan Air Force) was the first Pakistani Skier to represent the country in 2010 Winter Olympics.

Olympics: A Pakistani’s journey from home-made skis to Sochi – The Express Tribune
 
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I think there was another post related
 
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KARACHI: Pakistan’s Muhammad Karim left for Sochi on Wednesday to compete in the Winter Olympics that is scheduled to begin on February 7. He is accompanied by a team manager and coach for the event.

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The mega-event will have as many as 98 categories from 15 winter sport disciplines, from which Karim will represent Pakistan in the alpine skiing competition.

Before leaving for Sochi, Karim had told The Express Tribune that he would compete in the giant slalom category as he had dreamt of making a mark for Pakistan at the Winter Olympics this time around.

In 2010, Muhammad Abbas became the first Pakistani to compete in the Winter Olympics. Karim said that he would follow Abbas’ footsteps, while also trying to improve his personal-best time.

In order to prepare for the Olympics and qualify for Sochi, the teenager trained in Austria last year.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 6th, 2014.

Like Sports on Facebook, follow @ETribuneSports on Twitter to stay informed and join in the conversation.

Karim departs for Winter Olympics – The Express Tribune
 
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From wooden skis to Olympic hopefuls: Why Pakistan's Air Force is training skiiers

In Pakistan's isolated Naltar Valley the Pakistani Air Force is training children who learned to ski on wooden planks tied to boots with wire for the 2014 Winter Olympics.

By Annabel Symington, Contributor / March 3, 2013

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In the isolated Naltar Valley, home to one of two ski slopes in Pakistan, children who learned to ski on wooden planks tied to boots with wire are being trained for the Winter Olympics by the Pakistani Air Force.

The Pakistani military, which is funding the program and which flew this reporter to the region, is eager to present a different side of Pakistan at a time when growing sectarian divisions are threatening an already fractured country.

“It is good PR,” says Ayesha Siddiqa, an Islamabad-based defense analyst and author of two books about the business interests of the Pakistani military.

There are a slew of other reasons the Air Force is backing Pakistan's Olympic push. Maintaining a tight grip of the development of the Naltar Valley ensures that the region stays firmly under the military’s oversight. The military is also involved in many profit-making ventures, and the decision to turn Naltar into a commercial ski resort is part of that tradition, she says.

Whatever the reason, it's brought opportunity and Olympic dreams to a small remote community in Pakistan that wouldn't otherwise see it. Skiing has become increasingly popular in the valley since a local boy returned from the Vancouver Winter Olympics, and the Olympic ambitions of the community have swelled with it.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about Pakistan? Take this quiz.

In 2010, Naltar-born, Muhammad Abbas, now 27, became the first Pakistani to qualify for the Winter Olympic Games. He took part in the giant slalom event at the Games in Vancouver,Canada, placing 79th out of 81 participants, and returned home a hero.

Like most children in the Naltar Valley, Mr. Abbas learned to ski on homemade wooden skis. Abbas was part of the Naltar Ski School, a program run by the Air Force that offers a full scholarship and coaching to 25 young skiers from the valley each year.

A team of three boys from Naltar is currently in Italy to compete in a qualifier for the 2014 Winter Olympics. They will then fly onto Austria, Turkey, and Lebanon for other competitions, hoping to amass the 140 points needed to qualify for the upcoming Games in Sochi, Russia.

Late last year it looked like budget constraints of the military-funded Ski Federation of Pakistan would keep Pakistan out of the 2014 Winter Olympics. But at a meeting in December 2012 of the Federation's executive committee and general council, which is made up of the Air Force's top dogs, participation in the next Winter Olympics was approved and additional budget was allocated by the Air Force.

Abbas is part of the team, along with Mir Nawaz, 19, and Mohammad Karim, 17.

Another four boys from Naltar are also preparing to fly to Tajikistan for the Asian Children Skiing Championship this month. The team includes Noor Muhammad, 14, who has been tipped for Pakistan’s 2018 Winter Olympics team.

Noor dreams of being a professional skier and is determined to get to the Olympics in 2018. When asked what is takes to make a top skier he says simply, “hard work.”

Gilgit in northern Pakistan, where the western edge of the Himalayas meet the Karakoram mountain range. The picturesque valley lies deep in snow for much of the year, and is only reachable by jeep along a narrow mountain road – or helicopter.

The valley's steep sides and powder snow offer perfect skiing conditions. The only other ski destination in Pakistan is in Malam Jabba, Swat, where a ski resort stood until militants destroyed it in 2008.

The Pakistan Air Force introduced skiing to the Naltar Valley – and Pakistan – in the 1960s as part of snow survival training for pilots stationed in the mountainous northern areas of Pakistan and the hostile terrain of the disputed boarder between Indian and Pakistani Kashmir.

The Air Force remains the sport’s chief patron and in 1990, they formed the Ski Federation of Pakistan to extend the reach of skiing beyond military personnel. The ski program has become a way for the Air Force to promote a different Pakistan story.

“We need to focus on reaching international standards and taking part in international competitions,” said Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Tahir Rafique Butt in a speech at the awards ceremony for the National Ski Championships held in Naltar in mid February. “All that they [the skiers of Naltar Valley] need is the opportunity.”

In addition to the scholarship program, the Air Force bankrolls ski lessons to around 120 children each year. “We take children from the age of 5, but they only play,” says Zahid Farooq, a retired Air Force officer who heads up the ski training program at Naltar, “They start proper lessons at 10 [years old].”

Equipment is limited, and while none of the children in the Air Force’s ski program use wooden skis anymore, the children train in two-hour rotations, swapping skis and boots with the incoming group.

The Air Force declined to comment on how much they expect to spend on sending athletes to the Winter Olympic, or how much they spend on the Naltar Ski program as a whole, but they do foot the bill for the entire venture.

India in 2011. The Games were hyped as the South Asian version of the Winter Olympics. Ifrah won gold for in the giant slalom, and Aminah took silver in both the giant slalom and slalom events.

But the girls haven’t been sent to any qualifying competitions for the Olympics. “We are still waiting and hoping that the federation will send us to the qualifiers too,” says Aminah, “I am happy the men’s team is participating in Europe, it’s very inspiring. But women skiers in Pakistan also have the talent to qualify for the Olympics. It is my lifelong dream too.”

There has been hostility in Naltar toward letting girls ski. Locals say that only “educated parents” are allowing their daughters to join the Naltar ski program – which is dominated by boys – suggesting that barriers for girls remain more firmly in place than most would like to admit.

A third of the children in the program this year are girls – a big increase from last year, according to the Air Force’s media director, Group Captain Tariq.

Mr. Farooq says that attitudes have started to relax since Muhammad Abbas returned from the 2010 Winter Olympics, but he admits that more needs to be done to get girls competing internationally, as well as to encourage girls to take up skiing in the first place – and their parents to let them.

Khuheen Sahab, 10, and Rukhsana Shaheen were allowed by their parents to join the ski school this year. Both wear the traditional shalwar top, a long shirt over their ski pants. Rusksana wears a headscarf, while Khuheen covers her head with a wooly hat. Rukhsana says that she would like to be able to ski all the time. “It makes me feel free,” she says.

Another challenge to Pakistan taking part in international events is that many of the children lack the necessary documentation that proves their exact ages, a requirement of international competitions. Children such as Rukhsana are put in classes based on their ability and an estimate of their age, but often don’t know their own ages.

“We are trying to train the children in the appropriate age categories,” says Farooq, “But many don’t have any documents.” According to him, 32 of the 117 children who trained this year could not prove their age.

Quetta by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni militant group. The air staff official looks at the screen and pauses.

“We can avoid militancy by exposing youth to positive activities, like skiing,” he says, “We need a positive international reputation.”

From wooden skis to Olympic hopefuls: Why Pakistan's Air Force is training skiiers - CSMonitor.com
 
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Good luck Karim. I'm sure you will be rewarded for your hard work. May Allah be with you.
 
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Pakistan’s Muhammad Karim finished his alpine skiing event at the 71st position out of 109 skiers in the giant slalom competition at Rosa Khutor resort Wednesday.

Ted Ligety became the first Winter Olympian this year to win a gold medal for the US, setting the best cumulative time of two minutes, 45.29 seconds in the two rounds.

Karim also made an improvement in Pakistan’s record. He finished the first run from a 4495 feet track in one minute and 43.44 seconds. He was 22.36 minutes behind Ligety.

The 18-year-old finished his second run in a minute and 43.97 seconds which was 10. 72 seconds behind the gold medal winner. Karim finished the two rounds in a total of three minutes and 27.41 seconds.

He outpaced India’s Himanshu Thakur, who concluded the race on the last spot, registering a time of three minutes, 37.55 seconds.

Although Abbas finished his 2010 Winter Olympic race with a cumulative time of three minutes and 20.75 seconds on 79th position, Karim’s performance can be considered better as his difference from the winner was 42. 12 seconds compared to Abbas’ 42.75 four years ago.

‘I will train and practice harder’

Karim though feels that he achieved his target. “I’m happy with the result because I didn’t want to get disqualified in the beginning,” Karim told The Express Tribune. “I under-performed because of that fear, I wish I could’ve performed with a little bit less pressure. Many athletes failed to finish the race and others were disqualified. So I was very careful.

It was tough, the track was very steep. But I tried and I understand that there is a room for improvement. Other skiers who did well were more experienced and that really counts in skiing,” said Karim.

However, he is now setting his eyes on the next Winter Olympics. “I’ll train and practice harder and hopefully compete in more races,” said Karim.

Meanwhile, his coach Iftikhar Bajwa said that Karim had only one chance and he performed carefully.

“Karim felt the pressure, because he was competing in only one race. I believe he could’ve given better results, but overall it was a good performance. The track in Sochi was also very demanding.”

Bajwa said that the Winter Olympics results of Abbas and Karim should not be compared with each other.

“It was a good show and Karim made a slight improvement,” added Bajwa. “We can’t compare 2010 performance with this year because the track was different and the two races are four years apart.”

Karim improves Pakistan’s record in Sochi – The Express Tribune
 
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No point wasting time and energy on Cricket. There is a lot of corruption and fixtures. Even the ICC have shown they are no different.

This is the right time to promote other sports in the country. I dream of the day when we advance in Football, Basketball, Tennis, Sking, and Ice Hockey.
 
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