After ban, pink slip for Japan swimmer

Published on: Wednesday, 8 October 2014 //

The head of Japan’s delegation to the Asian Games is to receive a severe reprimand by the country’s Olympic committee (JOC) in the wake of swimmer Naoya Tomita’s fine and ban for stealing a camera in South Korea.


Tomita was expelled from the September 19 to October 4 Games in Incheon and told he had to pay his own way home after admitting to stealing a camera valued at 8 million won ($7,600) from a journalist working for a South Korean news agency.


Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported that the JOC held a board meeting on Wednesday and decided to censure delegation chief Tsuyoshi Aoki, as well as hand out stern warnings to general director Yuji Takada and official Daichi Suzuki. A formal decision would be made at an executive meeting on November 21, Kyodo added.


“I feel sorry and feel regret (about what has happened),” said JOC President Tsunekazu Takeda. “I want to apologise to all the people (of Japan).”


Tomita has been suspended for 18 months by the country’s swimming federation and fired from his job after stealing the camera at the Games.


He was initially told he had to stay in South Korea until the case was resolved but was cleared to leave after being issued with a summary indictment and paying a fine of 1 million won. A former world champion, Tomita won a gold medal in breaststroke at the last Asian Games in 2010 but failed to win any medals this time. He was caught on closed circuit television stealing the camera after the journalist reported his gear missing. Kyodo reported Tomita had been suspended by the Japanese Swimming Federation until March 31, 2016.


His employer, sports apparel manufacturer Descente, had fired the 25-year-old swimmer, Kyodo said. The federation’s executive director Masafumi Izumi and national team manager Norimasa Hirai had been censured over the incident.


Hunt still on for missing Asiad athletes


Associated Press

SEOUL, OCTOBER 8


South Korean police are searching for seven athletes and a reporter who went missing after the Asian Games closed on Saturday in the port city of Incheon.


The whereabouts of three athletes from Nepal, two from Sri Lanka, and one each from Bangladesh and the Palestinian territories are unknown, police inspector Baek Seung-cheol said on Wednesday. A TV reporter from Pakistan was also missing, he added.


Police believe there was a possibility that the eight were looking to work illegally in the country, and have been focusing their search efforts in the nearby city of Ansan, which has a large community of migrant workers. ]


Police said the athletes’ visas expire on October 19, and the reporter’s on October 30. Nearly 10,000 athletes competed in the Asian Games.


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