Equestrian Australia suspends Olympian Heath Ryan over horse whipping video
Australian Olympian Heath Ryan has been suspended by Equestrian Australia after a video emerged that appeared to show him repeatedly whipping a horse.
Ryan, 66, represented Australia in dressage at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008.
The video — reportedly about two years old — shows a man striking a horse around 40 times. Ryan issued a statement saying he was acting in "the horse's best interest".
Ryan said the horse, named Nico, came to him after an accident that resulted in a female rider needing hospital treatment.
The Australian said Nico "had always been a problem child and would just not stop" and after the video he was able to rehome the horse.
"I am so sad this was caught on video. If I had been thinking of myself I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the knackery," Ryan said.
"That video was a life or death moment for Nico and I genuinely had to try my very hardest to see if Nico would consider other options.
"All of this transpired sincerely with the horse's best interests the sole consideration. Unbelievably it was so successful for everyone except me with the release of this video."
Britain's three-time Olympic champion Charlotte Dujardin missed the Paris Games last year after a video emerged of her repeatedly striking a horse around its legs with a long whip. She was subsequently banned for a year by the FEI, equestrian sport's world governing body.
After the Ryan video drew attention, Equestrian Australia said it had received a formal complaint about one of its members and had imposed a provisional suspension from all competitions and events.
"Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage," a statement read.
"Our policies include high standards to protect all participants and their horses against any adverse physical, social, and emotional conditions."
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An Olympic gold medallist in the event at the Tokyo Games of 2021 and silver medallist last year in Paris, Stubblety-Cook was pragmatic about his latest performance. "Last year, I had a lot of time off and a lot of time to reflect and see where I was at - and make sure I really wanted to commit to the next four years," he said. "And it's year one out of four so we're taking it much more as a four-year approach (to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics)." In the men's 200m backstroke, Josh Edwards-Smith (1:56.94) and Brad Woodward (1:57.14) earnt selection for the worlds. In the women's 200m breaststroke, Ella Ramsay (2:23.92) and Tara Kinder (2:24.61) also made the team. And Sam Short's return to form continued with victory in the men's 1500m freestyle - he touched in 14:52.43, just 0.56 seconds ahead of fellow 21-year-old Ben Goedemans. Swim star Mollie O'Callaghan has emerged from a self-described dark hole to prove she can remain a world-beater. 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