00:00Paralympic marathon runner Elena Kongost was disqualified and denied a bronze medal after
00:12being disqualified just two meters from the finish line.
00:16Kongost, 36, is a Spanish T12B2 track and field athlete who was born with a degenerative
00:22vision impairment and thus ran with guide Mia Carol Bruguera in Paris.
00:28The athlete finished third in the T12 marathon event with a personal best of .348, but it
00:34counted for nothing.
00:35That's because Kongost let go of the rope, which is not allowed within Paralympic rules,
00:40to help Bruguera, who was dealing with a cramp, just before snatching third place.
00:46Kongost expressed her displeasure shortly after learning about the decision.
00:50The popular athlete doesn't regret her actions as she insists she did the right thing by
00:55looking after a fellow human being.
00:58Kongost told Marca,
00:59I would like everyone to know that I have not been disqualified for cheating, like
01:03but rather I have been disqualified for being a person and for an instinct that comes to
01:07you when someone is falling and is to help or support them.
01:11I'm devastated, to be honest, because I had the medal.
01:15I'm super proud of everything I've done, and in the end, they disqualified me because
01:2010 meters from the finish line, I let go of the rope for a second because a person
01:25next to me fell face first to the ground and I grabbed the rope again and we crossed the
01:30finish line.
01:32The next athlete is three minutes away from me, so it was a reflex action of any human
01:37being to hold on to a person who is falling next to you.
01:42When there is no help, no benefit, and when it is clear that I stopped dead in my tracks
01:47because of that situation.
01:50They only say that I let go of the rope for a second, and since I let go, that's it, there's
01:55no going back.
01:57I don't understand how anyone can reason or understand the situation.
02:00That it's not about cheating, that it's not about dragging an athlete.
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