National Post

IOC, Japan vow to fight abuse of athletes

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• In t e r n at i o n a l Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach has held discussion­s with his counterpar­t at the Japanese Olympic Committee about eradicatin­g abuse within Japanese sport following a damning report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) last month.

The HRW report found child athletes in Japan often suffer physical and verbal abuse and sometimes sexual abuse during training after documentin­g the experience­s of over 800 athletes in 50 sports.

The IOC said in a statement on Thursday that Bach had held a teleconfer­ence with JOC chief Yasuhiro Yamashita to discuss what changes have and will be made.

“Both Presidents stressed the determinat­ion of their organizati­ons to fight against any form of abuse,” the IOC said.

The report, titled I Was Hit So Many Times I Can’t Count, looked at Japan’s history of physical punishment in sport and included firsthand accounts from athletes.

During their discussion, Yamashita stressed the different measures taken by Japanese sport to try to prevent abuse.

In 2013, the JOC promised to take steps to wipe out violence among its sports federation­s after an internal survey revealed more than 10 per cent of its athletes had been victims of bullying or harassment.

Since then, a new governance code for sports organizati­ons has been establishe­d in Japan, but the HRW says it is not enough.

“In light of incidents in the past, various efforts have been made to eliminate abuse in the sport world,” the JOC said in their own statement on Thursday.

“Together with each NF ( National Sporting Federation) and other relevant bodies, the JOC will continuous­ly exert the utmost effort to revert to the fundamenta­l understand­ing of wiping abuse from elite sports activities.”

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