Placeholder Content Image

National disgrace: Report reveals young Aussie gymnasts abused for decades

<p>A new report has revealed the abuse young Australian gymnasts have received for decades, making it the country’s national disgrace.</p> <p>Mostly young girls, have admitted to being molested, abused, and bullied by the same people who hired to protect them.</p> <p>Taxpayer-funded sporting authorities did not intervene for unexplainable reasons.</p> <p>However, some have claimed that they chose to turn a blind eye to the abusive system as they were obsessed with winning.</p> <p>One girl revealed to the just completed Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) review into gymnastics that her male gymnastics coach would press his genitals against her leg while helping her stretch.</p> <p>“When we were being stretched in the gym he would have an erection, which I would feel him pushing repetitively on my hips or back while grunting and sighing,” she said.</p> <p>“He would often stretch me for much longer than the other girls. This was all done so publicly, at an age when you aren’t sure exactly what’s right or wrong or even normal, by someone your own parents respected and told you to respect.”</p> <p>Another young person revealed that her massage therapist sexually abused her when she was just eight or nine years old.</p> <p>“This man abused me in various ways, often with my Mum in the room,” she said.</p> <p>“I would lie face down on the massage table with tears streaming down my face in silence. I remember it being incredibly painful, but I did not want to complain.”</p> <p>The report also revealed that some girls, some who were not yet teenagers, would warn each other about coaches who preyed on gymnasts once they reached puberty.</p> <p>“As a group we tried to have signs and signals to help us avoid it even slightly,” one victim said.</p> <p>“We whispered things like ‘he’s got wandering hands today, try and avoid him if you can.’”</p> <p>Another victim revealed she had been routinely body-shamed, including at the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS).</p> <p>They ran the country’s national high-performance gymnastics program from 1981-2012.</p> <p>“The first time I was called fat at the AIS, I was 11 years old and weighed 22 kilograms,” she said.</p> <p>“There was another girl in my group who was called fat at nine years old when she weighed 18 kilograms. It goes to show that it really didn’t matter what we looked like or how little we weighed, we were called fat regardless.”</p> <p>Almost 200 past and present gymnasts gave shocking testimonies of their experiences in the sport.</p> <p>The Commission was told: “We know people that have like attempted suicide, people that harm themselves, people that are bulimic, anorexic, because of this. People have been admitted to hospital, been involved with the police, developed psychosis.”</p>

News

Placeholder Content Image

Born with nothing: Filipino orphan becomes Aussie hero at Commonwealth Games

<p>A 147cm-tall “pocket rocket” who started life in a Filipino orphanage has become Australia’s latest Commonwealth Games hero, breaking a 24-year drought by winning gold on the vault.</p> <p>Christopher Remkes grabbed gold on the vault last night with a winning score of 14.766, including an impressive opening vault of 14.866.</p> <p>The 21-year-old says his small stature is his secret weapon, noting: “My height is almost like a super power, I’m lucky to have the build I have, it means I can go fast in the air.”</p> <p>Chris, who was adopted by South Australian couple Mike and Dora Remkes when he was two, paid an emotional tribute to his parents after his incredible win.</p> <p>“Without my parents I wouldn’t be here today, I would probably still be in the orphanage,” he said.</p> <p>“I owe everything to my parents, they gave me so much love and support and drove me around to all the competitions.”</p> <p><img width="402" height="403" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7817292/capture_402x403.jpg" alt="Capture (9)" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>Mark Remkes, who was in the audience to watch his son claim victory, told of how Chris had been dumped at a hospital at just two days old before being handed to an orphanage.</p> <p>“We had been childless for seven or eight years,” he told <strong><a href="https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/2018-commonwealth-games/chris-remkes-from-a-box-in-an-orphanage-to-commonwealth-gold/news-story/27f23e85dd2b5d0b5c7f58e55121e063">The Australian</a></strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">.</span> “Adoption was our last option. It was so important for us to start a family. Then all of a sudden a child came up for adoption. We were given a file we could read which was supposed to have no photo. The CEO of the agency accidentally left the photo as the last page.</p> <p>“He forgot to remove it. When we opened the folder we opened it from the back instead of the front. We saw the photo first and before we read (anything else) we said we will take him, we’re going to get him.</p> <p>“We couldn’t leave someone like that in the conditions he was in. We were in The Philippines for two weeks. We spent the first week in Manila, the second week at the orphanage where he was from.</p> <p>“All he knew for the first nearly two years of his life was nothing bigger than a cot. When we went back to the orphanage, we saw where he survived so to speak for the first two years of his life.</p> <p>“It was a normal cot with no legs, on the ground. There were teeth marks in it. Kids were climbing out. To feed them all, they cooked up a bulk meal, put out so many dishes and fed three or four kids. It was just like a ration line.”</p> <p><img width="399" height="224" src="http://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/78e6a8e6045761e398d3faff05de28e7?width=650" alt="Chris Remkes says he owes everything to his parents. Chris with his dad Mike as a youngster: Photo: (@chrisremkes1) Instagram" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>The Remkes arrived in The Philippines with gifts for the orphanage.</p> <p>“When we went back there the head nun that was running the place was in tears because she had never heard him laugh before,” Mark said.</p> <p>“He was laughing and running and smiling. She had never seen that from him in the two years he was in the orphanage — he was given up at one and half days old.</p> <p>“It was really, really sad to see. We took a full suitcase with insect repellent, moisturiser and that sort of thing. They were overwhelmed with gratitude.</p> <p>“It was a heartwarming introduction to being a parent for us.”</p> <p>Mark, who is a men’s gymnastics coach, said his son has loved gymnastics since starting out as a five year old.</p> <p>“His passion his so strong and his journey is still continuing,” the proud dad said.</p> <p>“We are proud of everything, he was given nothing in life and he has taken every opportunity and run with it.”</p> <p>Chris broke a 24-year Commonwealth Games vault drought for his nation, which was last won by an Australian in 1994.</p> <p> </p>

News

Our Partners