KINGSTON, JAMAICA — In a transformative move that promises to reshape the landscape of sport in the region, Jamaica has been positioned as the epicenter of a bold and historic grassroots project set to redefine Paralympic sport across the Caribbean.
With the emphatic endorsement of Andrew Parsons, President of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), the island nation is now poised to lead a generational shift in inclusive athletic development.
“Jamaica will be the hub of Caribbean Parasports development,” declared Parsons during his recent visit to the island—an historic occasion that not only reaffirmed Jamaica’s leadership in adaptive sport, but unveiled the blueprint for a five-year legacy project underwritten by the Latin American and Caribbean Development Bank and the Americas Paralympic Committee (AmPC).
Laying the foundation: Paralympic academy among key deliverables
At the core of this regional undertaking is the proposed establishment of a Paralympic Academy in Jamaica, a visionary hub where education, elite training, and state-of-the-art facilities will converge to drive the next wave of para-athletic excellence. The groundwork will begin in earnest when a high-level delegation from the bank and AmPC lands in Jamaica next month to commence implementation.
“This is a negotiated bilateral and visionary partnership for the sustainable development of Jamaica and the Caribbean,” explained Christopher Samuda, President of the Jamaica Paralympic Association (JPA) and a sitting Executive Board Director of AmPC. “We’re not just financing sport; we’re future-proofing it.”
Samuda emphasized the critical role of infrastructure in this transformation: “Financing teams, athletes, and coaches… is essential, yes. But building out an infrastructure where education and elite physical training are married to modern facilities—that is the genetic root of sports development.”
Voices from the movement: Athletes, advocates, architects of change
For Travis Ebanks, Chairman of the JPA Athletes’ Commission and a practicing attorney, the moment is nothing short of revolutionary.
“This marks a historic moment for Jamaica and the wider Caribbean,” he said. “The focus on grassroots development is a powerful investment in the future of Parasports in our region. It represents not just opportunity, but a clear commitment to inclusion, excellence, and regional leadership.”
Ebanks’ sentiments were reinforced by Samuda, who championed a bold infrastructural vision: “You’ve got to literally break ground and build from the grassroots up if we are serious about development. The hope of a prospective Olympic swimmer will drown without a pool. The basketballer will be a basket case without a court. So let’s get to work…”
Samuda issued a compelling call to action—one that calls for the creation of multi-sport complexes across Jamaica’s counties, funded by public-private partnerships, operated by professionals, and designed for long-term sustainability.
Objectives that move a region forward
Beyond physical infrastructure, the project is built around transformational goals:
- Forging intersectoral and community-based partnerships
- Establishing Jamaica as the leading Caribbean destination for Parasports
- Fostering a culture of inclusion, excellence, and diversity
- Creating a model for athlete and coach capacity building throughout the Caribbean
The initiative will also elevate the profile of Paralympism in the public consciousness, with education campaigns aimed at promoting the values of determination, courage, equality, and inspiration that define the movement.
Jamaica: Leading with vision, building with purpose
What once may have seemed aspirational is now being mapped into reality. Jamaica is not just preparing for a new chapter in Parasports—it’s authoring it.
With the world watching, and the region rallying, the island stands ready to raise the bar—not only for its own athletes, but for an entire hemisphere of competitors whose stories of resilience and talent deserve both a stage and a support system.