Systemic Failures Blamed for Boxing Accident; KSOC Sanctions National Boxing Body

Global Economic Times Reporter

korocamia@naver.com | 2025-09-30 05:17:30


 

The Korean Sport & Olympic Committee (KSOC) has publicly disclosed the results of its investigation into a catastrophic accident that left a middle school athlete in a coma during a national boxing competition earlier this month. The findings reveal a shocking level of systemic negligence and incompetence, confirming the incident was a preventable man-made disaster stemming from the total mismanagement of the Korean Amateur Boxing Association (KABA).

In response, the KSOC, led by President Yoo Seung-min, has issued a severe Institutional Warning to KABA and mandated the immediate implementation of robust safety measures and victim compensation plans.

The Incident and Its Aftermath 

The tragic event occurred on September 3rd at the President's Cup National Boxing Competition, held at the Seogwipo Multi-purpose Gymnasium on Jeju Island. A male middle school boxer, referred to as 'A,' collapsed and lost consciousness immediately after the second round commenced. He was later diagnosed with severe brain damage and remains in a coma, fighting for his life.

Following the accident, KSOC dispatched Secretary-General Kim Na-mi to the site to meet with the athlete’s family. A thorough investigation conducted between September 12th and 17th, involving KABA officials, coaches, and referees, unearthed multiple, critical failings across the tournament’s organization and execution.

A Cascade of Failures 

The KSOC investigation highlighted a complete breakdown of safety protocols, with KABA demonstrating severe dereliction of duty in multiple areas:

Absence of Safety Planning and Emergency Protocols 

The most alarming finding was KABA’s failure to establish a basic internal safety management plan for the competition. While the organization had submitted documents outlining a system for immediate communication between the operations center, medical team, ambulance, and affiliated hospital, this crucial emergency communication network was never actually put into practice. Furthermore, KABA failed to execute essential pre-event checks, neglecting to confirm the status of the contracted ambulance, verify the location and route to the affiliated hospital's emergency room, or establish a reliable emergency transport system.

Non-Compliance with Regulations and Unqualified Personnel 

Fundamental competition rules were blatantly ignored. KABA’s own regulations mandate the presence of a doctor or nurse, yet neither was deployed on the day of the accident. A nurse was only belatedly assigned to the event three days later, on September 6th.

In a further display of regulatory disregard, the boxer's second (trainer or coach) was revealed to be an unqualified individual who had not completed the necessary coach registration for the current year, raising serious questions about the professional oversight provided to the young athlete.

Inadequate Post-Incident Response 

KABA’s administrative and remedial actions were equally deficient, compounding the tragedy. The accident was only reported to the KSOC on September 8th—a full five days after the incident—and only after a complaint was lodged by another tournament participant, indicating the association’s lack of urgency and proper reporting structure.

Moreover, the chaotic initial response led to distressing scenes, including the athlete's father attempting self-harm in front of the ring. Even amidst this turmoil, the association failed to halt all activities, allowing matches to continue on other rings, underscoring a profound lack of empathy and proper crisis management.

Mandatory Reforms and Systemic Overhaul 

In addition to the institutional warning, the KSOC has issued a stern directive to KABA, demanding they establish compensation measures for the injured athlete, including full support for hospital expenses, and to develop a specialized safety manual befitting the nature of combat sports immediately.

Beyond the immediate sanction, the KSOC is using this incident as a catalyst for sweeping, nationwide safety reforms across all federations. It plans to amend its regulations to make it mandatory for all member sports organizations (National Federations) to include a comprehensive safety management plan within their Articles of Association. This step will serve to reinforce the safety management system across all competition operations. The KSOC further announced that compliance will be rigorously checked during regular comprehensive audits of all member organizations.

Finally, in collaboration with the Sports Safety Foundation, the KSOC will finalize and distribute a Comprehensive Manual for Safety Management of Sports Events to all member sports organizations and regional sports councils next month, signaling a decisive move to institutionalize safety and prevent future tragedies of this scale.

The tragic accident has not only spotlighted the dangerous shortcomings within the Korean Amateur Boxing Association but has spurred the nation’s top sports body to implement critical, overdue reforms aimed at protecting athletes at every level of competition.

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