Olympics: Korean skating back on thin ice ahead of Pyeongchang
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[January 31, 2018]
By Peter Rutherford and Yuna Park
SEOUL (Reuters) - Four years after the
Korea Skating Union (KSU) was supposed to have cleaned up its act,
allegations of favoritism and athlete mistreatment have again roiled
South Korean sport just weeks ahead of the Pyeongchang Winter
Olympics.
Short track powerhouse South Korea has won 21 of the 48 gold medals
awarded in the sport since it joined the Olympic program in 1992 but
stories of destructive rivalries, physical abuse and favoritism have
long cast a shadow over the KSU.
Public anger with the organization boiled over in 2014 when Viktor
Ahn, who won three gold medals for Korea at the 2006 Games, won
three more for Russia in Sochi, raising questions about what drove
him to turn his back on his homeland.
With then-President Park Geun-hye demanding answers and the Sports
Ministry promising to "review the entire system," the KSU's vice
chairman Jeon Myung-gyu, widely reported to be the most powerful
figure in the short track set-up, stepped down.
The KSU has enjoyed a period of relative calm over the last few
years but with the eyes of the world trained on Korea ahead of the
Feb. 9-25 Winter Games, the organization has again blackened the
host's sporting reputation.
A short track coach was banned from the sport for life last week
after admitting to physically assaulting Shim Suk-hee, one of the
country's top female skaters. [nL4N1PI39F]
The KSU also came under fire after speed skater Noh Seon-yeong said
she no longer wanted to compete for the national team due to
favoritism in the selection process after an "administrative error"
almost cost her a place at the Games.
Coupled with the fact that the KSU welcomed its former vice chairman
Jeon back to the organization last year, the fresh controversies
suggest the post-Sochi investigation has done little to foster
long-lasting change in Korean skating.
'CHRONIC PROBLEMS'
A sports ministry official told Reuters the incident involving Shim,
who won gold, silver and bronze medals in Sochi, showed the KSU had
not truly reformed.
"The KSU released a statement after the Sochi Olympics saying it
would undergo reform in order to fix internal chronic problems such
as factionalism and unfairness in selecting athletes," said the
official.
"But the Shim case shows those chronic problems are still there," he
added. "The problem seems to lie in the people who are running the
federation, including the executive team."
The surprising absence of two Russian skaters from their Olympic
contingent has since allowed speed skater Noh to regain her spot at
Pyeongchang but she told local media she was tired of favoritism and
bias at the KSU.
She said Jeon had handpicked three skaters to train personally, and
that the KSU had decided among themselves who was going to get the
chance to skate for medals in Pyeongchang.
"I couldn't focus on training amid such severe discrimination," said
Noh. "This has been going on for years but everybody is hushing it
up."
The incidents again stoked public fury with the KSU and over 200
online petitions have been filed with the presidential Blue House
calling for it to be reformed or disbanded.
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Gold medalist Shim Suk-hee of South Korea salutes to her national
flag during the medal ceremony. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Kim Sang-hang, president of the KSU, apologized on Friday and vowed
to "respond sternly to violence or any other act that violates human
rights" at the organization.
While the 2014 review was aimed at cleaning up the KSU, the Sports
Ministry has been unable to provide Reuters with the report
findings. The official said he was unsure how or when the
investigation was wrapped up.
The Korean Sport and Olympic Committee told Reuters it had been
involved in the probe in 2014 but did not know how it ended as the
Sports Ministry was in charge.
Reuters has been unable to locate any report detailing the
conclusions from the Sports Ministry's review of the KSU.
'NOTHING WOULD CHANGE'
While the ministry official said Jeon had stepped down in 2014
because he was "embroiled in factionalism and unfairness in
selecting athletes," the KSU has said only that he resigned to take
responsibility for the poor performance of the men's short track
team on Sochi, where they failed to win a medal.
The KSU made no mention of issues such as infighting or favoritism
when Jeon resigned in 2014 and has steadfastly denied he had been
biased towards athletes of certain universities or backgrounds.
When asked about such issues, a KSU official only referred Reuters
to the statement from its president on Friday.
"Our president has apologised for the ongoing issues on Friday,
including those involving Shim Suk-hee and Noh Seon-yeong," he said.
"He promised to prevent such things from happening in the future and
said he would come up with measures to reform the KSU and implement
them as soon as the Olympics ends."
Professor Chung Hee-joon of Dong-a University's department of
physical education said the South Korean system was rife with
instances of athletes being mistreated.
"Athletes rarely speak up when this kind of thing happens," he told
Reuters. "Shim Suk-hee returned to her training base after the
assault without reporting it to the police or a related sports
agency. Why is that?
"She probable knew nothing would change even if she had reported it.
"You can actually describe some of the people in South Korean sport
as 'gangsters.'"
(Additional reporting by Haejin Choi; Editing by Greg Stutchbury)
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