Olympics

China deny gymnasts are underage

China has denied media reports that two of its female gymnasts were too young to compete in the Beijing Olympics.

'The Chinese Gymnastics Association organised the athletes' passports according to identity documents provided by the province, autonomous region, or city where they were registered,' the association said in a statement sent to AFP.

The association also attached a copy of the gymnasts' passports and identity cards, which both showed that the two were both 16 - the minimum age for Olympic gymnastic competitors, according to a rule set in 1997.

Chinese media and the New York Times have raised questions about whether He Kexin and Jiang Yuyuan, two athletes named in the squad, have yet turned 16.

Online records listing Chinese gymnasts along with reports in Chinese news media indicated that He and Jiang could be as young as 14, The New York Times said.

But according to the copy of the identity cards faxed to AFP, He was born on January 1, 1992, and Jiang on November 1, 1991 - making them both 16.

The association said Jiang and He had both recently attended international competitions.

'These competitions are official ones run by the International Federation of Gymnastics,' it said in the statement.

'The federation would have strictly verified their passports, and confirmed their ages conformed to the age regulations of the World Championships, the World Cup and the Olympic Games.'

China has faced criticism for its harsh training regime for young athletes, gymnasts in particular.

In a BBC report in 2005, British Olympic rowing great Matthew Pinsent described children in a Beijing gymnasium being pushed through the pain barrier and said one young boy had clearly been beaten by his coach.

 
RTÉ.ie Sport: Since 1997, gymnasts must be at least 16 to compete in the Olympics
Since 1997, gymnasts must be at least 16 to compete in the Olympics
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