The Phnom Penh Post

Top HK athlete says coach abused her as teen

- Elaine Yu

A TOP Hong Kong hurdler yesterday accused her former coach of sexually assaulting her when she was a schoolgirl, prompting the city’s leader Carrie Lam to ask police to look into the matter.

Lui Lai-yiu is the first highprofil­e woman in socially conservati­ve Hong Kong to tell of abuse as part of the #MeToo movement exposing sexual misconduct.

In an open letter posted on Facebook on her 23rd birthday, Lui did not name the man who abused her as a young teenager, calling him “coach Y”.

Lam, the city’s first female chief executive, told reporters she was “very upset” to learn about the abuse.

“The police chief will certainly follow up in earnest,” she said, urging other victims to come forward “as difficult this experience is” so that allegation­s could be investigat­ed.

The #MeToo campaign spread rapidly in October after multiple accusation­s against Hollywood movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and has since shaken artistic, media and political circles globally.

Lui’s post included a photo of her holding a sign that read “#METOO” with her initials “LLY” and her eyes cropped out of the shot.

She recalled how she thought nothing of it when the coach offered her a massage at his home to relax her muscles, but that he then removed her clothes and molested her.

“In my mind he was a coach I respected,” Lui wrote. “I had never thought he would do despicable things to his students.”

Pui Ching Middle School, which Lui attended at the time, said yesterday that after the athlete told them three weeks ago of her intention to publicise the incident they had immediatel­y stopped working with the accused coach.

The Hong Kong Amateur Athletic Associatio­n expressed “deep regret” over the incident and said it takes a “zero toler- ance” approach to abuse.

Police said they would actively look into the incident.

Lui is a promising athlete who took the gold medal in the 60-metre women’s hurdles at the Asian Indoor Games in September. She said she was inspired to speak out by US Olympic goldwinnin­g gymnast McKayla Maroney, one of a number of women who accused former USA Gymnastic team doctor Lawrence Nassar of abusing them.

The Hong Kong-based Associatio­n Concerning Sexual Violence Against Women urged the public to use the hashtag #MeTooHK this month in a bid to increase the movement’s resonance in the city.

 ?? AFP ?? Hong Kong hurdler Lui Lai-yiu poses with her gold medal for the women’s 60m hurdles during the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games in Ashgabat.
AFP Hong Kong hurdler Lui Lai-yiu poses with her gold medal for the women’s 60m hurdles during the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games in Ashgabat.

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