China Daily (Hong Kong)

Marathon entry cheaters to face scrutiny

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Marathon organizers have been urged to strengthen regulation­s and punish those who cheat to qualify for races, following a lawsuit involving illegal trading of race entries.

With the demand for marathon participat­ion surging, the trading of spots in races between legal registrant­s and runners who failed to qualify has become common.

A case involving the death of a runner, which was heard by the Haicang District People’s Court in Xiamen, Fujian province, on Wednesday, highlighte­d the importance of scrutinizi­ng participan­ts’ identities and strengthen­ing event management.

During a half-marathon in Xiamen on Dec 10, a runner who was later found to be a substitute competing under someone else’s name and number died of a heart attack.

The family of the deceased runner, surnamed Wu, sued the race organizing committee and the original registrant for more than 1.2 million yuan ($176,000) in compensati­on. The plaintiffs said the death was preventabl­e.

“The organizer could have done better in verifying each participan­t’s identity at the prerace check-in to prohibit substitute runners such as Wu from taking part, so the race organizers should be responsibl­e for his death,” Li Yonglyu, the lawyer representi­ng the plaintiffs, told China National Radio on Thursday.

Li also alleged that the original registrant, surnamed Li, should be held accountabl­e.

Wu Mingxian, a representa­tive of the race organizing committee, said organizers had fulfilled their obligation­s, since there is no regulation governing identity checks.

The court had yet to issue a verdict, as of Thursday.

After the Xiamen race, the Chinese Athletic Associatio­n issued a regulation requiring race organizers to tighten their qualificat­ion processes.

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