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  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    1:44pm, EST

    Mother of Pistorius' slain girlfriend: 'Why my little girl?'

    Frennie Shivambu / JustusMedia via Reuters

    South African "Blade Runner" Oscar Pistorius, right, smiles with his girlfriend, model Reeva Steenkamp, at an awards ceremony in Johannesburg on Nov. 4. Steenkamp is dead, Pistorius is being charged with her murder and the woman's mother wants answers.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The mother of Reeva Steenkamp, who was shot to death Thursday in the home of Olympic and Paralympic star Oscar Pistorius, vented her grief and frustration to a South African newspaper.

    The interview, conducted by telephone Sunday and reported Monday by The Times of Johannesburg, appears to be June Steenkamp's first since her daughter's death at Pistorius' home in the gated Silver Woods Luxury Estate outside Pretoria.

    "Why? Why my little girl?" she asked. "Why did this happen? Why did he do this? What for?"


    Pistorius, 26, has been in custody since the shooting and is to be formally charged in a court appearance Tuesday with the murder of Steenkamp, a 29-year-old law graduate, model and actress who had gained global attention with her blond good looks and bubbly personality.

    He has strongly denied allegations that he murdered his girlfriend.

    NBC News' full coverage of the Oscar Pistorius case

    June Steenkamp told The Times that she and her family are left searching for logic in a time of grief and shock.

    "All we have is this horrendous death to deal with ... to get to grips with," she said. "All we want are answers ... answers as to why this had to happen, why our beautiful daughter had to die like this."

    Reeva Steenkamp was recently featured in the new season of a reality show, "Tropika Island of Treasure"; had done promotional work for international brands including Toyota; and was on the December 2011 cover of FHM magazine, which named her one of the "100 Sexiest Women in the World" two years in a row.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "She had so much of herself to give and now all of it is gone," June Steenkamp said. "Just like that, she is gone. … In the blink of an eye and a single breath, the most beautiful person who ever lived is no longer here."

    Mike Steenkamp, whom The Times identified as a family spokesman, said the Steenkamps were trying to simply make it through the funeral, which like Pistorius' court appearance is scheduled for Tuesday.

    "For now, we are just focusing on … getting this part of the difficult journey behind us," he told The Times.

    "We're trying not to think about Oscar or the court appearance," he added. "We have deliberately not watched TV or listened to the radio. We just don't want to think about it. We want to blank it all out and focus for now on the here and now."

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    152 comments

    "Why my little girl?" I know where you're coming from, and I don't mean to be callous, but this happened because your daughter was with a psychotic nutcase (from steroids, genetic, injury, culture, ???) which was aggravated by his drinking, and she didn't get out of there when the cops came two hour …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, interview, south-africa, mother, featured, paralympics, murder-charge, oscar-pistorius, reeva-steenkamp, times-of-johannesburg
  • Updated
    14
    Feb
    2013
    10:38am, EST

    'Blade Runner' Oscar Pistorius charged with murder

    The athlete who rose to fame in London last summer as the first amputee runner in the Olympics has reportedly been arrested by South African police after his girlfriend was shot and killed in his home. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports and NBC sports analyst Ato Boldon talks about the case, calling it an "absolute shock."

    By John Newland, Jason Cumming and Cecile Antonie, NBC News

    Olympic and Paralympic star Oscar Pistorius was charged with murder Thursday after his girlfriend was shot dead at his South African home.

    South African Police spokeswoman Denise Beukes said that Pistorius, 26, and the victim were the only people present when the shooting took place. The woman had been shot at least twice, police said.

    Pistorius will appear for a court hearing on Friday at 9am local time, the South African prosecutor’s office confirmed.

    Numerous media outlets reported that the sprinter -- who is nicknamed "Blade Runner" because he races wearing carbon fiber prosthetic blades -- may have mistaken the woman for an intruder. 

    Beukes would not confirm the victim's identity, but said investigators were "very surprised" to hear media reports that the shooting was possibly a case of mistaken identity. 

    A publicist for Reeva Steenkamp, a model whom Pistorius was dating, confirmed to NBC's TODAY that her client was dead. She described the incident as a "huge loss for everyone and too shocking for words."

    © Lucky Nxumalo / City Press - Gallo Images via Getty Images, file

    Oscar Pistorius and Reeva Steenkamp attend an award ceremony in Johannesburg, South Africa, on November 4.

    Beukes said there were no signs of forced entry to the home and said that police would oppose any application Pistorius might make to be released on bail. 

    Beukes said there had been reports about previous problems at Pistorius' home that were "allegations of a domestic nature." When a reporter asked if she meant domestic violence, she nodded and said yes.

    "There are witnesses and we have interviewed them," she added. "We're talking about neighbors and people who heard things earlier in the evening and when the shooting took place."

    The Associated Press reported that a 9mm handgun had been found at his home in the luxurious Silver Woods gated community.

    More on this story from NBC Sports

    Sarit Tomlinson, who is Steenkamp's publicist, told Britains' Sky News that the the pair had been together for a couple months.

    "She was a rising star ... a very bright young girl," Tomlinson said. She noted that "no one knows what happened" but said "we are in communication with the people on the scene."

    The Silver Woods Country Estate released a statement on its website early Thursday: "We are deeply saddened by the tragic cir­cum­stances that occurred today at Sil­ver Woods. Our sincere con­do­lences, thoughts and prayers go out to Reeva Steenkamp’s fam­ily and friends."

    Steenkamp, a 30-year-old law school graduate, gushed about Valentine's Day on Twitter Wednesday, posting "What do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow???" and "It should be a day of love for everyone."

    What do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow??? #getexcited #ValentinesDay

    — Reeva Steenkamp (@reevasteenkamp) February 13, 2013

    Pistorius was born without a fibula in both legs and battled for years to be allowed to compete against able-bodied athletes. 

    'National hero'
    He was the first double amputee to run in the Olympics. He qualified for the 400-meter semi-finals and 4 x 400-meter final at the London 2012 Summer Games. 

    His website highlighted that Pistorius ran in 11 races during the London 2012 Olympics and Paralymics and returned home with "two Paralympic gold medals, Paralympic silver, two world records, a Paralympic record, an Olympic individual semi-final and an Olympic final."

    Pistorius, a double amputee born without fibulas in his legs, has trained hard to participate in the Olympics despite having to wear prosthetic legs. NBC's Mary Carillo reports.

    He earned headlines after qualifying for the 2011 world championships in Daegu, South Korea, and is widely considered the world's most famous disabled athelete.

    Speaking to Sky News, South African journalist Kribani Pillay described Pistorius as a "national hero and national icon."

    Violent crime is major issue in South Africa, and many homeowners own guns.

    In a January 2012 New York Times article, Pistorius described his reaction to a security alarm going off in his home:

    He mentioned that a security alarm in the house had gone off the previous night, and he had grabbed his gun and tiptoed downstairs. (It turned out to be nothing.)

    I asked what kind of gun he owned ...  He fetched his 9-millimeter handgun and two boxes of ammunition. We got back in the car and drove to a nearby firing range, where he instructed me on proper technique. Pistorius was a good coach. ... I asked him how often he came to the range. “Just sometimes when I can’t sleep,” he said.

    The U.S. State Department Bureau of Diplomatic Security warns of the danger of Pretoria and other South African cities: "On a rating scale of low, medium, high, and critical, Pretoria, Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town are rated 'critical' for crime."

    Citing South African Police Service 2011 crime statistics, the agency pointed out home invasion as a particularly violent crime that occurs "at an alarmingly high rate."

    In Gauteng Province, which includes Pretoria and Johannesburg, there were 7,039 home invasions reported in 2011, according South African police statistics.

    Artist Melinda Bam of Pretoria, who was Miss South Africa 2011, expressed her sadness on Twitter and mentioned "how unsafe most South Africans feel because of crime."

    Heartbroken for #ReevaSteenkamp's family & for #OscarPistorius.This highlights how unsafe most South Africans feel because of crime#RIPReeva

    — Melinda Bam (@melindabam) February 14, 2013

    South Africa's Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee declined to discuss the shooting. 

    "SASCOC ... knows no more than what is in the public domain, which is there has been an alleged fatal shooting on the basis of a mistaken identity and an apparent assumption of a burglary," it said. "The organization is in no position to comment on the incident other than to say our deepest sympathy and condolences have been expressed to the families of all concerned." 

    Oscar Pistorius may soon make history as the first double amputee to compete in the Olympics. The South African sprinter's emergence as one of the world's fastest runners has generated controversy over whether his carbon fiber prosthetic legs give him an unfair advantage, something he vehemently denies. NBC Sports' Mary Carillo reports.

    NBC News' Matthew DeLuca and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Reeva Steenkamp was model, budding TV star

    Pistorius sorry for timing of outburst at Paralympics -- but is brand destroyed?

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Full coverage of London 2012

    This story was originally published on Thu Feb 14, 2013 10:38 AM EST

    721 comments

    Stop trying to pull our leg, Pistorius. Your story will never stand up in court. Give it up and confess, you don't have a leg to stand on.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, south-africa, featured, paralympics, updated, oscar-pistorius
  • 10
    Sep
    2012
    5:48am, EDT

    Stars close London Paralympics that 'lifted the cloud of limitation'

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Fireworks light up the stadium during the closing ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium on September 9, 2012.

    Stefan Wermuth / Reuters

    Performers with flame throwers burn the grass in the Olympic Stadium during the closing ceremony.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Singer Rihanna performs during the closing ceremony.

    Peter MacDiarmid / Getty Images

    Swimmer Ellie Simmonds of Great Britain, right, who won four medals during the Games, enjoys the atmosphere with fellow Team GB Paralympians during the closing ceremony.

    Peter MacDiarmid / Getty Images

    Jay-Z performs with Coldplay during the closing ceremony. The stars were paid a nominal one pound ($1.60) to play.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Circus artists enter the stadium from the air.

    The Associated Press reports — Farewell, London. Good luck matching that, Rio.

     Coldplay, Rihanna and Jay-Z rocked the Olympic Stadium on Sunday night to give the biggest-ever Paralympic Games a rousing send-off, wrapping up an unforgettable summer of sports in Britain.

     The three-hour party at the packed 80,000-seat arena in east London gave the world a chance to celebrate 11 days of Paralympic competition that have shifted perceptions and shattered stereotypes about the disabled.

     "In this country, we will never think of sport the same way and we will never think of disability the same way," said Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London organizing committee. "The Paralympians have lifted the cloud of limitation." Read the full story. 

    Related content:

    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • Look back at the best images from the opening ceremony
    • London 2012's legacy under the spotlight
    • Race car driver who cheated death wins 3 medals
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    14 comments

    Great Britain did a fantastic job hosting the Olympics and Paralympics this summer. Congratulations to participants, volunteers, residents and supporters of all types. Thank you for a job well done!

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    Explore related topics: sports, london, world-news, london-2012, closing-ceremony, paralympics
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    8:32am, EDT

    'I'm myself again': Photographer Giles Duley returns to work after Afghanistan blast

    British photographer Giles Duley made his name covering fashion and music before turning his attention to photojournalism. Last year, Duley was severely injured after he stepped on an I.E.D. while on patrol with American troops in Afghanistan.

    18 months on, Duley has returned to work as a photographer at the Paralympic Games. "I'm myself again," he told NBC News' Baruch Ben-Chorin. Hear his story in the video below.

    Only 18 months after losing both his legs and one of his arms in an IED explosion in Afghanistan, photographer Giles Duley has returned to work at the Paralympics. "I'm myself again," he tells NBC News' Baruch Ben-Chorin.

    Related content:

    • PhotoBlog posts on Joao Silva, another photographer wounded in Afghanistan
    • Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics
    • Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to Paralympics
    • Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games
    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • The best images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    3 comments

    Congradulation to this young man for getting his life back, after giving his life to his country.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, world-news, photojournalism, paralympics, giles-duley
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    8:11am, EDT

    100-meter showdown: Team USA vs. Pistorius

    Team USA sprinters Jerome Singleton and Blake Leeper will take on South African Oscar Pistorius in the 100-meter final at the Paralympics on Thursday. "I feel like I was meant for this moment," Leeper told NBC News. "Oscar, you'd better be ready because me and my teammates are coming for you."

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    Although all Olympic and Paralympic sports are exciting to watch, there’s nothing quite like the men’s 100-meter sprint -- blink and you might miss it.

    And Thursday's 100-meter final promises to be an especially dramatic showdown, all played out in front of a sold-out 80,000-seat crowd.

    Oscar Pistorius is the defending Olympic champion, having won in Beijing in 2008.  His recent outburst after losing the 200-meter race by 0.07 to Brazil’s Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira has been the talk of the Games this week.  Tonight, they’ll face -- and race -- each other again.

    But the Brazilian isn’t the only rival that Pistorius has to worry about.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Among the South African’s stiffest competition will be Team USA’s Jerome Singleton and Blake Leeper. Singleton is the current world champion in the 100 meters, beating Pistorius to that title last year. Leeper recently tied Pistorius’ world record 100-meter time of 10.91 seconds.

    Singleton characterized his rivalry with Pistorius as epic.

    London 2012: Hosting the Games

    “Mohammed Ali had Joe Frasier. Larry Bird had Magic Johnson,” he told NBC News. “We’re going to see a phenomenal race. It’s going to be the Paralympic champion, Oscar Pistorius, versus the current world champion, Jerome Singleton,” he said flashing a showman’s smile.

    “He’s been one of the only athletes to beat me in six years in the hundred.  He’s definitely a guy who stands up when it matters,” Pistorius said of Singleton.

    Brotherhood of rivals
    Despite their serious rivalry, these athletes respect and admire each other.

    Singleton, 26, told NBC that Pistorius was both “a best friend and a brother” to him.

    Julian Stratenschulte / EPA

    Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira (L) of Brazil and Oscar Pistorius (R) of South Africa compete in the Men's 200-meter on Sunday. Oliveira won the gold medal and Pistorius the silver.

    Leeper said he was inspired to run after watching Singleton and Pistorius race each other in the 100-meter final of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

    London 2012 legacy under the spotlight as end nears

    “At that point, I’d never run track in my life. To be here now -- four years later in the same race -- is mind-blowing,” he said.  

    Michael Steele / Getty Images

    Blake Leeper competes in a men's 200-meter race on Saturday, the third day of the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

    For 23-year-old Leeper, it has been a long road to the Olympics. Born with a congenital birth defect, the Tennessee native was fitted with his first pair of prosthetics at just nine months of age.

    “Growing up, I can remember there were times I would come home and ask my mom and dad, ‘Why me? Why does this have to be me?’ The older I got, I realized it’s not 'why me,' it’s … 'why not me?' I feel like I’m meant for this moment. I’m meant for this to happen to me. Oscar, you’d better be ready because me and my teammates, we’re coming for you!” he said.

    Sideline scientists 
    Singleton and Leeper’s lives off the track are inspiring.

    Singleton, now a full-time athlete, was a student when he competed in the Beijing Paralympics.

    Transforming the despair of being paralyzed in battle into determination, Iraq War veteran Scott Winkler sets his sights on a medal at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

     

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    Jerome Singleton competes in a men's 200-meter round race at the 2012 Paralympics in London on Saturday.

    Although he was proud to win a silver medal in Beijing, he felt it could have been a gold had he been focused on running full-time. So he put his career as a scientist on hold. 

    Singleton wasn’t stepping back from just any career. The physics-mathematics double major studied industrial engineering and plans to pursue a doctorate in biomechanics.

    Blind runner's despair turns to joy at Paralympics

    “I’ve actually interned at NASA's Glenn Research Center ... working on a machinery program that was used for the Mars landing,” he said. “I went on to research at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, where I got to learn about different dimensions in smaller space.” 

    For his part, Leeper remembers the moment he decided to fully commit himself to running. He was studying applied physics at the University of Tennessee with plans to develop racing prosthetics.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Nineteen at the time, Leeper sat his parents down and broke the news that he’d decided to move to Chula Vista, Calif., to train full-time at a specialized facility.

    His mother burst into tears.

    “Seeing that, it really hurt me, but at the end of the conversation, I still felt the same way,” he said.  “I had to do this. When I realized that even though I could see my mom cry and I still want to do it, I realized this is something I really want in life.”

    The men they’re ‘supposed to be’
    Leaper and Singleton are aware of their place in history, and the example they are setting for others.  

    “Life can be viewed in two ways: As a warning or an example,” Singleton said. “Each day we watch the news and we see warnings of what we shouldn’t do. So we need to provide examples for our communities of what we should do, and be the man we were supposed to be, not one day meet the man we could have been.”

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London. Madsen told her story to NBC's Jamieson Lesko.

    For Leeper, the whole point of being at the Olympics is to inspire.

    “Whether it’s one kid, two kids, three kids that see me, and if I inspire them ... show them that, yeah, I’m different, I have a disability, but as long as you keep a strong mindset and stay focused you can accomplish anything," he said.

    “When I was little the doctors told my parents I would never walk. Now I’m here running for my country. If that is not a testimony, I do not know what is,” Leeper added with a huge grin.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Video: 100-meter showdown: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius
    • Rights group: US waterboarded Gadhafi opponents, sent them to Libya
    • Deadly shooting mars new Quebec premier's victory rally
    • France sends aid, cash to rebel-held Syrian cities, source says
    • Couple held hostage by pirates for 388 days to set sail on new journey
    • Hundreds of Afghan soldiers detained, fired over 'links with insurgents'
    • Mexico arrests 'El Gordo,' alleged leader of Gulf Cartel drug gang
    • Cringe! Britain's finance chief booed at Paralympic Games

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    2 comments

    Good luck Paralympics. I will never watch the events and most of the world won't either. Strap on all the devices necessary to compete and let technology win the day.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, london, featured, paralympics, singleton, 100-meter, pistorius, leeper
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    6:39am, EDT

    Blind runner's despair turns to joy at Paralympics

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Blind Brazilian runner Terezinha Guilhermina and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana react after crossing the finish line to win the Women's 100m T11 final at the Paralympic Games in London on Wednesday night. 

    Blind or partially-sighted athletes are permitted to use a guide runner in Paralympic races, but the guide is never permitted to cross the finish line before the blind runner. At the 2012 Games, guides became eligible for medals for the first time.

     Video: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius in 100m showdown

    24 hours earlier Guilhermina's bid for 400m glory was derailed when Soares de Santana tripped on the home straight, a moment captured in a series of heartbreaking images published on PhotoBlog.

    But their despair was replaced by joy as Guilhermina took the 100m gold in a world record time of 12.01 seconds, adding to the 200m title she won on Sunday.

     

    Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Related content:

    • Oscar Pistorius sorry for timing, not content, of angry outburst at Paralympics
    • Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics
    • Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to Paralympics
    • Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games
    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    48 comments

    The human spirit, thank you for showing us how far we can go!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, running, london, london-2012, featured, track-and-field, paralympics, terezinha-guilhermina, guilherme-soares-de-santana
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    5:17pm, EDT

    Heartbreak after blind runner's guide falls just short of finish line at Paralympic Games in London

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Terezinha Guilhermina of Brazil runs as her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana lies on the track after he fell in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Assia El Hannouni of France wins gold in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Christopher Lee / Getty Images

    Terezinha Guilhermina of Brazil and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana lie on the track after falling in the Women's 400m - T12 Final on day 6 of the London 2012 Paralympic Games at Olympic Stadium on Sept. 4, in London, England.

    Leon Neal / AFP - Getty Images

    Brazil's Terezhina Guilhermina and her guide Guilherme Soares de Santana console each other after Soares de Santana fell just ahead of the finish line of the women's 400m T12 final at the Paralympic Games at the Olympic Park in east London, England on Sept. 4.

    Update, September 6th: The night after these pictures were taken Terezinha Guilhermina and Guilherme Soares de Santana returned to the track, and this time their race had a much happier ending. Find out what happened when they competed in the 100m final.

    Related content:

    • Video: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius in 100m showdown 
    • Oscar Pistorius sorry for timing, not content, of angry outburst at Paralympics
    • Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics
    • Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to Paralympics
    • Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games
    • 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage
    • More images from the Paralympic Games on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    6 comments

    Did every runner have a guide? How does the guide work with the runner? Are they in contact? Did the two trip each other? Did they get up and finish the race? Are there alternatives to guides? It would be OK with me for athletes to use their guide dogs in the race.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, running, london, london-2012, track-and-field, paralympics, terezinha-guilhermina, guilherme-soares-de-santana
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    8:41am, EDT

    Cringe! Britain's finance chief booed at Paralympic Games

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- If there’s one sound nobody expects to hear at a Paralympic gold medal ceremony, it’s booing - let alone the sound of the 80,000-seat Olympic Stadium crowd jeering in unison. 

    But that’s exactly what happened Monday evening when British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, who is in charge of steering the country’s economy out of its current doldrums, was introduced to present medals for the men’s (T38) 400-meter race.

    Video clips of Osborne's embarrassed reaction quickly went viral.


    His anticipated cuts to public welfare spending, which have angered many in the disabled community, may have been behind the huge boo.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Adam Hills, disabled comedian and host of Channel 4’s “The Last Leg” program, joked: “Who went, ‘Hmm, who's the best person to give out medals to disabled people? I know, the guy in charge of funding cuts for disabled people. That won’t go wrong!’”

    Most unpopular
    A recent poll shows Osborne to be the most unpopular member of the British government, with 56 percent of voters saying he’s doing a “bad job” and 48 percent saying he should lose his job altogether.

    Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics

    Osborne seemed unfazed by his lack of popularity.

    “If I was trying to win a popularity stakes, there are some easy things I could do. I could spend a lot more money –  that might make me popular in the short term,” he told the BBC’s The Andrew Marr Show on Sunday.  “It’s not the right decision... In a difficult environment, it’s not surprising that the Chancellor is not the most popular member of the government.”

    Cameras are swarming Prince Harry once again, as he steps out for the first time since his Las Vegas photo scandal, but this time they are catching him doing good works, visiting sick children and appearing at the Paralympics. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Prime Ministers get booed too
    Obsorne wasn’t the only one to feel the crowd’s disdain. Over at the aquatics center, his boss Prime Minister David Cameron was also met with jeers.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Some booing could be heard as he stepped up to present 17-year-old British swimmer Ellie Simmonds with her gold medal for the 200m individual medley.

    In this case, though, wild cheers erupted in favor Ellie, drowning out much of the booing and keeping the focus firmly on the champion.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Pistorious sorry for timing, not content, of Paralympics outburst
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    17 comments

    It's "unfazed", not "unphased". MSNBC apparently isn't satisfied with hiring people who didn't go to journalism school - now they want people who didn't finish 8th grade.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, europe, osborne, uk, sport, london-2012, featured, paralympics, austerity
  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    12:37pm, EDT

    Pistorius sorry for timing of outburst at Paralympics -- but is brand 'destroyed'?

    Tal Cohen / EPA

    Oscar Pistorius of South Africa, left, and Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira of Brazil shake hands on the podium after the Men's 200-meter final during the London 2012 Paralympic Games on Sunday. Pistorius apologized Monday for the timing of his complaints about a rival's blades following his defeat in the final, but insisted that officials need to change the rules to prevent some runners from getting an unfair advantage.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    Updated at 6:15 a.m. ET Tuesday: LONDON - “Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius -- the unofficial face of the Paralympic Games -- was clearly still reeling Monday after losing a key race over the weekend.

    Pistorius issued an apology for “the timing” of his remarks, which in essence accused race winner Alan Fonteles Oliveira from Brazil of not playing fair. But the usually mild-mannered South African did not step back from his statement alleging that Sunday’s race was not run on an even playing field.

    On Tuesday, some in the British media speculated whether he had already tarnishing his image. "If Oscar had run the time he can run I don't think we'd be having the debate about the length of the blades or how tall an athlete should be on blades," Gareth A Davies of the Daily Telegraph said on the U.K.'s Channel 4 News.

    "I think his outburst kind of ruined in a sense, or destroyed the Pistorius brand," Davies said.

    "He's running faster backwards now than he runs forward, (isn't he) with his retractions," anchor Jonathan Edwards joked.

    The 200-meter final was the Paralympic race Pistorius had said he was looking forward to the most, and his shock at losing was palpable. Simply put, he was the one to beat. In Saturday’s qualifying heat, Pistorius had set a new world record. He’d won the gold in the 200 meter in Beijing.

    Doctor Gerry Versfeld, Oscar Pistorius' doctor, describes the decision to amputate the sprinter's legs when he was a boy.  NBC Sports' Mary Carillo reports for Rock Center.

    But then came Sunday night’s race, and his stunning loss.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    “We are not running a fair race here. I can’t compete with Alan’s stride length,” said Pistorius, who made Olympic history this year as the first disabled athlete to run in the able-bodied games. Pistorius himself fought claims that carbon-fiber prosthetics are advantageous when compared to human legs.

    ‘Absolutely ridiculous’
    In front of a sold-out stadium Sunday night, the 24-year-old South African had a clear lead coming around the final bend. Then Brazil’s Oliveira surged in the final stretch, passed Pistorius, and won the race by .07 seconds.

    "I don't know how you can come back, watching the replay, from eight meters behind on the 100 to win. It's absolutely ridiculous," Pistorius told British broadcaster Channel 4 in a trackside interview.  

    South African runner Oscar Pistorius, who lost both his legs as a child, talks with TODAY's Savannah Guthrie about becoming the first double amputee to compete in the Olympics, and says it was "difficult" to hear people say his prosthetics give him an unfair advantage.

    His comments jarred with the fact that he has said that this year’s Paralympic Games have led spectators to “focus really on the ability” of the athletes, rather than “focusing on the disability.”

    Usually known for his modesty and good sportsmanship, Pistorius accused Oliveira of having an advantage by adjusting the length of his blades, thus giving the Brazilian a longer stride.

    "The [International Paralympic Committee] have their regulations. The regulations allow that athletes can make themselves unbelievably high. We've tried to address the issue with them in the weeks up to this and it's just been falling on deaf ears,” he said on Channel 4.

    Uncharacteristic outburst 
    Pistorius’ remarks reverberated through the sporting world. 

    Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics

    “I’m quite shocked the way Oscar had a bit of an outburst because it’s not in his character, so obviously he feels very strongly that the rules need to be addressed,” Olympic silver medalist sprinter Iwan Thomas said on Channel 4. “But as we sit here tonight the rules are as they are and [Oliveira’s] done nothing wrong.”

    Eddie Keogh / Reuters

    The blades of Brazil's Alan Oliveira (R) and South Africa's Oscar Pistorius are seen after the Men's 200m T44 classification at the Olympic Stadium during the London 2012 Paralympic Games on Sunday.

    Thomas did not hold out much hope that Olympic authorities would change their decision.

    “I don’t think they’re just going to suddenly tear up the rule book just because Oscar said something. Although he’s the king of the sport, rules are there and it probably takes a long process to get things looked at,” he said.

    Measured response
    Indeed, the International Paralympic Committee defended its rules by tweeting a photo showing the maximum heights allowed for individual athletes, and showing Pistorius at a height of 193.5cm and Oliveira at 185.4cm. 

    “There are rules in place with IPC Athletics whereby we measure the length of the blade prior to competition, check they're in proportion with the body and all of the athletes last night passed the test, so yes, he (Oliveira) was a legitimate winner,” IPC representative Craig  Spence said.

    Click here of The Science of Sport's findings on the race.

    Sorry for ‘timing’
    On Monday, Pistorius stuck by the essence of his post-race comments and did not step back from his complaint.

    He said in a statement:

    “I would never want to detract from another athlete's moment of triumph and I want to apologize for the timing of my comments after yesterday's race. I do believe that there is an issue here and I welcome the opportunity to discuss with the IPC [International Paralympic Committee] but I accept that raising these concerns immediately as I stepped off the track was wrong. That was Alan's moment and I would like to put on record the respect I have for him. I am a proud Paralympian and believe in the fairness of sport. I am happy to work with the IPC who obviously share these aims.”

    Meanwhile, Team South Africa and SASCOC (South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee) issued a statement welcoming Pistorius' apology.

    Oscar Pistorius from South Africa became the first double amputee to compete in the games by running  the men's 400-meter race. He says that having the opportunity to represent his country in the Olympics "far surpassed" his expectations.

    "We note and welcome Oscar's apology for anything said in haste, and we obviously fully understand that he was emotionally upset immediately after such an important event here in London. We again congratulate Oscar on winning his silver medal on Sunday. As always we are fully supportive of all our athletes and will engage through the official channels from the National Paralympic Committee in South Africa to the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) on any concerns that Oscar may have."

    They’ll meet again
    Oliveira, who called Pistorius a “great athlete,” said he was saddened by the South African’s reactions.

    “I am just sad with the interview where he said my blades were too big” Oliveria said. “He was bothered by my time in the semi-finals and he wanted to get to me with his polemic but it did not work. For me he is a really great idol and to hear that from a great idol is difficult.”

    Pistorius and Oliveira are on course to meet again in round one of the 100 meters on Wednesday and round one of the 400 meters on Friday. Assuming they both make those finals, they will race again at the 100 meter final on Thursday and the 400 meter final on Saturday.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Sun Myung Moon, founder of Unification Church, dies at 92
    • Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric
    • 'Big enough for all of us': Clinton says US can work with China in Pacific
    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter
    • Ex-Marine on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    52 comments

    Hey, wasn't he the guy that said the blade size and type didn't matter when he wanted to run the regular Olympics? This is just poor sportsmanship.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, oliveira, featured, blade-runner, paralympics, pistorius, jamieson-lesko
  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    8:10pm, EDT

    Paralympic Games are biggest since 1960

    Eddie Keogh / Reuters

    Germany's Wojtek Czyz wins silver in the men's long Jump F42/44 classification final during the London 2012 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium Aug. 31.

    Clive Rose / Getty Images

    Timothy Antalfy of Australia competes in the Men's 100m Butterfly - S13 Final on day 2 of the Games.

    The London Paralympics is hosting the biggest number of athletes since its inception in 1960 at the Rome Games, with 4,280 competitors representing 164 nations compared to 400 participants from 23 countries in the Italian capital.

    Nightly News: Representing Afghanistan at the Paralympic Games

    Additional images from the Paralympic Games in Photoblog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Olivia Harris / Reuters

    Matt Stutzman of the U.S. uses his feet to support his bow and his teeth to fire the arrow during the Archery Men's Individual Compound - Open at the London 2012 Paralympic Games, Aug. 31.

    Justin Setterfield / Getty Images

    David Weir of Great Britain (C) competes in the Men's 5000m - T54 heat 3 on Day 2 at the London 2012 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium on Aug. 31, in London.

     

    2 comments

    I'm amazed by the Archer!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, london, world-news, paralympics
  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    7:58am, EDT

    Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has since rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- Angela Madsen's journey to the London 2012 Paralympics is nothing short of extraordinary.

    Complications following a back injury she sustained while serving in Marine Corps at the age of 20 led to her becoming a paraplegic when she was in her 30s.

    Bound to a wheelchair, she fell into a deep depression. She lost her job. Her marriage dissolved.


    "I lost my house ... I ended up homeless, kept my things in a locker at Disneyland. Happiest place on earth, right?" she told NBC News at the USA track-and-field training camp at RAF Lakenheath, near Cambridge, England, last week.

    But the native Californian missed surfing, so she set out to find a way back to the water, determined to turn her life around.

    Some of the hottest tickets at the London Paralympics are for wheelchair rugby. The sport is so violent and fierce, that it has been dubbed "Murderball."

    "I started taking responsibility … and started making the changes and decisions to move positively forward in my life,” she said.

    Now, her definition of a disabled person is "somebody who doesn't believe they can and doesn't try.”

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    She competed in the 2006 world surfing championships and then fell in love with rowing.

    She turned this hobby into history by rowing across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

    Ahead of the London Paralympics, L.A. Galaxy midfielder David Beckham spent a day learning blind soccer from Team Great Britain.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I didn't row across my first ocean until I was 47,” she said with a laugh.

    "I have six Guinness World Records for rowing oceans. I've circumnavigated Great Britain ... I've been places on this planet that no human being has ever been before. A thousand miles from land in any direction ... it's been a pretty amazing life."

    Read Angela Madsen's profile at the Paralympic Games' website

    Next year, she plans to row solo across the Pacific Ocean.

    Madsen rowed for Team USA in the Beijing Paralympic Games, narrowly missing the podium. "I missed the medal rounds by 7-hundredths of a second.”

    Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed during a parachute jump with the 82nd Airborne in November 2003, will compete in the javelin at the London Paralympics.

    In the London 2012 Paralympic Games, the 52-year-old is trying her hand at track and field events, competing in the women's shot put and javelin.

    "I don’t have any regrets about anything. If I could go back and change anything I wouldn't, except for the amount of pain I have with the rods in my back,” Madsen said. “That could definitely go. But I can’t foresee change in anything. I'm very, very satisfied with the life that I have now."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Superhuman' athletes burst onto world stage
    • Red Cross halts most Pakistan aid in wake of beheading
    • Unexploded WWII bomb disrupts Amsterdam airport
    • Pakistani Christians live in fear after girl's blasphemy arrest
    • 'A less polar pole': Arctic sea ice at record low
    • Botched restoration turns Spanish church into tourist attraction

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    56 comments

    Not "Ex-Marine," it's "former or retired." Once a marine, always a marine. Just saying...ooorah.

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    Explore related topics: games, usa, military, featured, paralympics, rower, angela-madsen
  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    4:55pm, EDT

    Look familiar? Opening ceremonies for the Paralympic Games

    Dennis Grombkowski / Getty Images

    Artists perform as a choir performs 'Principia' by Errollyn Wallen during the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympics at the Olympic Stadium on August 29,

    Dennis Grombkowski / Getty Images

    Artists perform with umbrellas during the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympics at the Olympic Stadium on August 29.

    Clive Rose / Getty Images

    Artists perform during the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympics at the Olympic Stadium on August 29 in London, England.

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Performers are lifted into the air in the Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony of the London 2012 Paralympic Games August 29.

    Slideshow: Olympics Opening Ceremony

    James Bond, a giant baby, and fireworks help kick off the London 2012 Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    "Enlightenment" is the theme for the opening ceremonies of the 2012 London Paralympic Games. Physicist Stephen Hawking was the show's MC and British royalty was in attendence. Some of the photos from today's ceremonies look similar to photos from the Olympic Opening Ceremonies on July 27. The Guardian reports that though there are similarities, it is supposed to be very different.

    Over the next 11 days, 4,200 athletes from 164 nations and territories will compete in a variety of sports including wheelchair basketball and wheelchair rugby. 

    Story: 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto the world stage

    4 comments

    Wonder how many were in attendance in the audience. Can't tell by the pics.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sports, london, world-news, paralympics, paralympic-games
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