New Straits Times

S. Korean triathlete kills herself after coaching abuse

-

A South Korean triathlete took her own life after enduring years of physical and verbal abuse from coaching staff and having her complaints to sporting authoritie­s allegedly ignored, according to reports.

Choi Suk-hyeon, 22, who won bronze in the junior women’s event at the 2015 Asian triathlon championsh­ips in Taipei, reportedly died at her team dormitory in Busan last month.

According to widely-circulated screenshot­s of her last text message conversati­on with her mother, she begged her to “lay bare the sins” of her abusers.

The South is a regional sporting power and regularly among the top 10 nations in the medal table at summer and winter Olympics.

But in an already intensely competitiv­e society, winning is virtually everything in its sports community — and physical and verbal abuse are known to be rife.

Suk-hyeon came fourth in the 2016 national championsh­ips elite women division but failed to fulfil her early promise, dropping to 14th in the same contest last year.

On one occasion, Suk-hyeon wrote in her journal: “It was raining today and I was beaten so bad... I am shedding tears every day.”

Multiple reports in South Korean media say Suk-hyeon compiled audio recordings of physical abuse.

In one file broadcast by cable news station YTN, her coach was furious she had put on weight: “You have to avoid eating for three days,” he said. “You promised me you would take responsibi­lity.”

Then he told her: “Clench your teeth,” followed by sound of a sharp slap.

Team officials forced her eat 200,000 won-worth (RM714) of bread as punishment for failing weight control and habitually beat her, said the reports.

Suk-hyeon complained to the Korean Sport and Olympic Committee (KSOC) in April seeking an investigat­ion.

KSOC denied it had ignored her complaint, stating in a press release it had assigned a female investigat­or after receiving Sukhyeon’s plea in early April.

It promised to take “stern measures” against those involved, expressing “profound regret” over the incident.

Prosecutor­s were now looking into the case, it added.

Last year, double Olympic gold medal-winning short-track speed skater Shim Suk-hee went public with accusation­s her former coach sexually molested and physically abused her multiple times.

The coach was jailed for 10 months.

 ??  ?? Choi Suk-hyeon
Choi Suk-hyeon

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia