World wrestling body condemns detention of wrestlers, says ‘events of these last days even more worrying’
International wrestling body United World Wrestling (UWW) on Tuesday condemned the treatment meted out to the protesting wrestlers and their detention following a scuffle with the Delhi Police on May 28.
The wrestling body said in a statement that the events of these “last days are even more worrying that the wrestlers were arrested and temporarily detained by the police for initiating a march of protest.”
Expressing its disappointment over the “lack of results” of the probe into alleged sexual harassment by Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) chief and BJP MP Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, UWW urged the authorities to conduct a thorough and impartial investigation into the allegations.
UWW said it will also hold a meeting with the wrestlers to inquire about their condition and safety and “reconfirm our support for a fair and just resolution of their concerns.”
Last month, UWW president Nenad Lalovic shot a letter to the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) demanding clarity on who is running the sport in the country, and marked a copy to Indian Olympic Association (IOA) President PT Usha and International Olympic Committee (IOC) official J Poivey. In its response, the WFI complained of “government interference” in their matters.
The aggrieved wrestlers had planned to throw away their medals into the country’s sacred Ganga River on Tuesday as part of an ongoing protest against sexual harassment but postponed their action farm union leader Naresh Tikait intervened and persuaded them against doing so.
The protest is being led by two women wrestlers — Olympic medalist Sakshi Malik and world championships medalist Vinesh Phogat — as well as Olympic medalist Bajrang Punia, who is male.
The protesting wrestlers reached the city of Haridwar in the evening, sat on the banks of the river and tearfully clutched their medals as a crowd gathered around them. They changed their mind after Naresh Tikait reached the site and convinced the wrestlers to give the government five days to respond.