
“Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth” – Buddha.
[Image: https://i.ibb.co/0hWSqby/wednesday-quote.jpg]
(02-07-2024, 04:54 PM)theold Wrote: After Zhang collapses, a man is seen running to help him, but he stops in his tracks and appears to look off court for further instruction.
A PBSI spokesman later told reporters that medical teams had to follow a rule where they needed the referee's permission before entering the court.
Lesson Learnt: Life and death cannot wait. Rules have to be broken.
(02-07-2024, 10:14 AM)sgbuffett Wrote: Singapore POFMA law can be used here:
The player died of heart attack
He did not die because medics were too slow.
My purpose of the above is not to accuse anyone of POFMA but the problem with this law.
Reality is often complex and this engenders differences in opinion and various thesis surrounding the event. The purpose of free speech is people are empowered to look at something that happens in different ways .
It's a process of discovering the truth given a set of facts.
Certainly a group of women organising a picnic will not be charged. But you cannot put a sentence together on why you think they were charged without triggering POFMA?
(03-07-2024, 05:39 AM)1twinkle07 Wrote: you should feel stupid about yourself...LOAD OF BULLSHIT FROM YOU AGAIN STEWPIG CLOWN
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sport/ch...ew-4452481
KUALA LUMPUR: Badminton's governing body on Tuesday (Jul 2) announced a "thorough review" following the death of a promising Chinese teenager who collapsed during a match.
Seventeen-year-old Zhang Zhijie was playing at the Asia Junior Championships in the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta on Sunday when he suddenly fell to the floor.
Indonesia's badminton association (PBSI) and Badminton Asia said he was promptly rushed to hospital but died that night having suffered a cardiac arrest.
However, there were questions about the medical response at the venue. Footage showed it took 40 seconds from when Zhang collapsed for any kind of help to arrive on the court.
"We are taking all necessary steps to thoroughly review this matter in consultation with Badminton Asia and Badminton Association of Indonesia (PBSI)," the Badminton World Federation (BWF) governing body said in a statement.
A PBSI spokesman on Monday blamed the hesitant emergency response on the referee and said that as hosts they were only adhering to BWF rules.
"Following the completion of our review, we will determine whether specific aspects of these guidelines need to be changed," the BWF added.
It is also waiting for an official report from Badminton Asia and the local organising committee "to assess whether the correct medical procedures were followed in providing aid to Zhang when he fell to the court".
Badminton great Lee Chong Wei earlier on Tuesday called for changes in scheduling to give players more time to recover.
The retired Lee, a three-time Olympic silver medallist, told The Star newspaper in Malaysia that Zhang's shock death should be a wake-up call for the sport.
He said that medical teams needed to be "more alert" and called for the BWF to "review their match and tournament schedule".
"He appeared tired and it's sad to accept the reality that China's future top player is gone," Lee said.
Chinese state media has also questioned the emergency response.
Source: AFP/rc
(03-07-2024, 06:18 AM)Bolixin666 Wrote: LOAD OF BULLSHIT FROM YOU AGAIN STEWPIG CLOWN
(03-07-2024, 05:44 PM)factuup Wrote: TS STILL SELLING HIS SNAKE OIL THAT THE AH TIONG COULD BE SAVED. SIBEH ATTENTION HOE