Sceptism about Beijing race as video shows Chinese runner being handed victory
Videos show three African runners waving He Jie, who was slightly behind them, ahead and gesturing towards the finish line
15 April 2024 - 13:17
byFarah Master
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Chinese runner He Jie, Ethiopian Dejene Hailu Bikila and Kenyans Robert Keter and Willy Mnangat take part in a half-marathon in Beijing, China April 14, 2024. Picture: REUTERS
Hong Kong — Beijing authorities are investigating Sunday's Beijing's half-marathon after footage shared online showed three African runners appearing to slow down near the finish line to allow China’s He Jie to overtake them and win.
He won in a time of 1:03:44, a second ahead of Ethiopian Dejene Hailu Bikila and Kenyans Robert Keter and Willy Mnangat, who all tied for the second place.
Videos, which Reuters was attempting to verify, showed the three African runners waving He, who was slightly behind them, in front and gesturing towards the finish line. All four had run together for the entire race of just over 13 miles.
He, a member of China's marathon team and national marathon record holder.
The event's organiser — the Beijing Sports Competition Management and International Exchange Center — referred a Reuters enquiry to the half-marathon's organising committee.
The Beijing Sports Bureau, the municipal body in charge of sports, said an investigation was under way and the findings would be published later.
The state-controlled Global Times newspaper said He's performance “drew scepticism as the three African runners seem to deliberately slow down for He to catch up”.
But many comments on social media were scathing, calling the race “embarrassing” or a “performance”.
Distance running is increasingly popular in China but races have a chequered history of cheating and poor organisation. In Shenzhen's 2018 half-marathon, 258 participants were caught cheating. Most had taken shortcuts while some wore fake bibs and others were impostors.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Sceptism about Beijing race as video shows Chinese runner being handed victory
Videos show three African runners waving He Jie, who was slightly behind them, ahead and gesturing towards the finish line
Hong Kong — Beijing authorities are investigating Sunday's Beijing's half-marathon after footage shared online showed three African runners appearing to slow down near the finish line to allow China’s He Jie to overtake them and win.
He won in a time of 1:03:44, a second ahead of Ethiopian Dejene Hailu Bikila and Kenyans Robert Keter and Willy Mnangat, who all tied for the second place.
Videos, which Reuters was attempting to verify, showed the three African runners waving He, who was slightly behind them, in front and gesturing towards the finish line. All four had run together for the entire race of just over 13 miles.
He, a member of China's marathon team and national marathon record holder.
The event's organiser — the Beijing Sports Competition Management and International Exchange Center — referred a Reuters enquiry to the half-marathon's organising committee.
The Beijing Sports Bureau, the municipal body in charge of sports, said an investigation was under way and the findings would be published later.
The state-controlled Global Times newspaper said He's performance “drew scepticism as the three African runners seem to deliberately slow down for He to catch up”.
But many comments on social media were scathing, calling the race “embarrassing” or a “performance”.
Distance running is increasingly popular in China but races have a chequered history of cheating and poor organisation. In Shenzhen's 2018 half-marathon, 258 participants were caught cheating. Most had taken shortcuts while some wore fake bibs and others were impostors.
Reuters
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most Read
Published by Arena Holdings and distributed with the Financial Mail on the last Thursday of every month except December and January.