News On Japan

Japan child athletes 'punched in the face, kicked, beaten'

Jul 21 (aljazeera.com) - Child athletes in Japan have suffered physical, verbal and sexual abuse while participating in sport activities, according to a new Human Rights Watch (HRW) report.

Released on Monday, the 67-page report (PDF) documented the experiences of more than 800 athletes in 50 sports, including first-hand accounts from athletes being choked, whipped with whistles or racquets and sexually harassed.

The damning publication came in the week that would have marked the start of the Tokyo Olympic Games had it not been for the coronavirus pandemic. The Games have now been postponed to next year.

"The specific abuses we documented include punching, slapping, kicking or striking with objects, excessive or insufficient food and water, athletes who were forced to train when they were injured or punished with excessive training, cutting or shaving hair as punishment and abuse by older teammates," Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at HRW, told a news conference.

The US-based rights group's report was based on interviews with more than 50 current and former athletes, an online survey that drew 757 responses, and meetings with eight Japanese sports organisations.

Of the 381 survey respondents aged 24 or younger, 19 percent indicated they had been hit, punched, slapped, kicked, knocked to the ground or beaten with an object.

As many as 18 percent reported experiencing verbal abuse, and five reported experiencing sexual assault or harassment while participating in sport as children.

HRW said not enough had been done since then, and demanded organisations such as the Japan Sports Council and the JOC use the upcoming Olympics as a catalyst for change.

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