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| South Korean Olympic short track champion Shim Suk-hee told a court her coach had been beating her since she was seven leaving her "deeply traumatised" (AFP Photo/YONHAP) |
Double Olympic gold medallist Shim Suk-hee broke down in tears as she told a South Korean court of the years of abuse she suffered at the hands of her coach.
Aged 21,
the short-track skater has four Olympic medals to her name, including relay
golds at both Sochi 2014 and on home ice at this year's Pyeongchang Games.
But she
told a court that her coach Cho Jae-beom had been beating her since she was
seven -- on one occasion breaking her fingers -- leaving her "deeply
traumatised".
His
violence "kept escalating" as she grew older, she said at the hearing
in Suwon, south of Seoul.
"He
frequently beat me and verbally abused me since I was seven... at one point
beating me with an ice hockey stick and breaking my fingers," she said.
Another
time he hurled metal nuts at her, ripping open her forehead.
Just weeks
ahead of the Pyeongchang Olympics, "he kicked and punched me so hard,
especially on my head, that I even thought 'I could die here'," she said,
breaking down.
South Korea
is a regional sporting power and is regularly in the top 10 medal table places
at the summer and winter Olympics. It is the only Asian country other than
Japan to have hosted both Games.
But in an
already intensely competitive society, winning is everything in its sports
community -- where coaches hold immense sway over athletes' careers, and
physical and verbal abuse are known to be rife. Those who speak out are liable
to be sidelined and castigated as "traitors".
Cho
admitted to police that he beat Shim and three other athletes at their training
camp to "improve their performance" and was given 10 months in prison
for assault at his trial in October.
But he
appealed against the sentence.
Shim said
she had been "brainwashed" by Cho who threatened to end her sporting
career if she spoke out, saying she had been "gripped by extreme fear and
anxiety" about Cho all her life.
"I'm
getting psychological treatment for depression, anxiety, sleep disorder and
post-traumatic stress disorder," she said.
The
pre-Pyeongchang beating left her concussed and she blamed it for affecting her
performance at the Games, where she failed to match her medal haul from Sochi,
which included silver in the 1500m and bronze in the 1000m.
She did not
testify at Cho's original trial for fear of "having to confront him",
she told the hearing on Monday, "but I mustered up courage because I
thought I needed to speak the truth".
The South
Korean women's curling team -- another star of this year's Winter Games, whose
unexpected run to the final and a silver medal earned them global headlines --
have accused their coaches of verbal abuse and exploitation.
The team --
nicknamed "Garlic Girls" after the local specialty of their rural
hometown -- said the managers had banned them from talking to other athletes,
did not share how donations and prize money were being spent and censored all
gifts and letters from fans.
South Korean Olympic gold medalist Shim Suk-hee tells court of years of abuse at hands of coach.— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 18, 2018
Just weeks ahead of the Pyeongchang Olympics, she says: "He kicked and punched me so hard, especially on my head that I even thought 'I could die here'"https://t.co/Nfyyo5E2Hy pic.twitter.com/XLU1rs4bJp

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