NBA re-evaluating training
programme in China after abuse allegations
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[July 31, 2020]
BEIJING (Reuters) - The National
Basketball Association (NBA) said it was re-evaluating its training
programme in China following allegations of abuse of young players
by local staff and harassment of foreign staffers at a facility in
Xinjiang.
The comments come after a report by ESPN that quoted unnamed
American coaches saying Chinese coaches hit young players. One
American coach who worked at a camp in Xinjiang complained of
harassment by local police, the sports network said.
"The allegations in the ESPN article are disturbing," NBA Deputy
Commissioner Mark Tatum said in an email statement to Reuters on
Thursday. "We ended our involvement with the basketball academy in
Xinjiang in June 2019 and have been re-evaluating the NBA Academy
program in China."
Tatum said the programme, launched in 2016, was set up to provide
support to existing development centres in China run by local
authorities.
"Our role was limited to providing three coaches at each academy,
none of whom have been alleged to have engaged in any wrongdoing,"
he said.
The NBA received a "handful" of complaints about mistreatment of
players, and Tatum identified four incidents of such abuse, a league
spokesman said, confirming elements of the ESPN report.
The General Administration of Sport of China, the country's top
sports body, did not respond to requests for comment on Thursday and
Friday. The foreign ministry declined comment on Thursday, saying
the issues raised in the ESPN report were not matters of diplomacy.
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NBA logos are seen next to a Chinese national flag outside a
NBA-themed lifestyle complex on the outskirts of Tianjin, China,
October 10, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee
China has been accused of human rights violations in the western
province of Xinjiang, including forced labour and holding at least a
million ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims in detention centres. China
has denied such accusations.
The NBA's standing in China, which has been its most important
overseas market, has deteriorated sharply since late last year after
Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey expressed support for
pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. Beijing's state television
pulled NBA games off its channels. It is not clear whether the games
will be aired again.
The league resumed play on Friday morning Asia time for the first
time since March, after a shutdown prompted by the COVID-19
pandemic.
(Reporting by Beijing newsroom; Additional reporting by Frank Pingue
in Toronto; Writing by Se Young Lee; Editing by William Mallard)
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