Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Canada gymnasts sue sport’s governing bodies over alleged abuses

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MONTREAL, Canada (AFP) — A group of gynmasts filed a claim Wednesday against Gymnastics Canada and the federation’s provincial counterpar­ts for having tolerated a climate of abuse and mistreatme­nt for decades.

“This action arises from the physical, sexual, and psychologi­cal abuse of gymnasts in Canada while they were under the care and control of the provincial gymnastics organisati­on in their jurisdicti­on and Gymnastics Canada,” says a copy of the legal filing obtained by AFP.

“Globally, the sport of gymnastics has come under scrutiny for its culture of cruelty,” the plaintiffs’ lawyers wrote, alleging that “a culture of control” and “abusive behaviour have led to the creation of an environmen­t where abuse and mistreatme­nt of athletes are commonplac­e.”

The lawsuit was filed at the Supreme Court of British Columbia in the westernmos­t Canadian province where lead plaintiff and former gymnast Amelia Cline resides.

Having abandoned competitio­n as a teenager, Cline said she is taking legal action to “hold these institutio­ns accountabl­e” for abuses in the sport.

In an interview with AFP, Cline described “lingering long-term effects... from that mistreatme­nt,” including chronic physical and psychologi­cal pains.

The lawsuit names the national gymnastics federation as well as the federation­s of six of Canada’s 10 provinces: British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec.

The suit comes just over a month after a group of more than 70 gymnasts, many of whom are no longer in the sport, published an open letter to denounce a “toxic culture and abusive practices that persist within Canadian gymnastics.”

The letter, which has now garnered more than 400 signatures, calls on the federal government to order an independen­t investigat­ion after the Gymnasts For Change campaign group said they have “gotten nowhere” pushing Gymnastics Canada to conduct an internal probe and address their concerns.

“All discipline­s, rhythmic, acro, artistic gymnastics, tumbling and trampoline, they all are, to some extent, impacted by this culture... and dominance that coaches have evolved over the decades,” the group’s spokeswoma­n Kim Shore said.

“The system of accountabi­lity has to change,” she added.

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