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Hong Kong aiding Australia bid to add wushu to Olympics as city’s stars bank Asian medals

Local wushu chief Ian Fok, who was instrumental in sport gaining Asian Games status, is also championing its addition into school curricula

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Hong Kong is sending a demonstration team to the Sanda World Cup in Melbourne to introduce other forms of wushu to the Australian public.

Hong Kong wushu bosses have formed an alliance with their Australian counterparts in a bid to press the sport’s claims for inclusion in the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games.

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Wushu has one foot on the Games ladder, after being added to the schedule for the 2026 Youth Olympics in Dakar.

It has been an Asian Games fixture since 1990, with Hong Kong claiming 21 wushu medals, including two golds, in nine Asiads.

The city remains a relatively fertile breeding ground for wushu athletes. Last month, Hong Kong beat China into second in the World Taijiquan Championship medal table. The positions were reversed at June’s inaugural Asian University Wushu Championship.

And Australian wushu has moved to tap into the talent from Hong Kong and mainland China to sell the sport to its natives when the country stages November’s Sanda World Cup.

Taolu is a performance branch of wushu in the image of gymnastics.
Taolu is a performance branch of wushu in the image of gymnastics.

Ian Fok Chun-wan, the president of the Hong Kong, China Wushu Union (HKCWU), told the Post: “We are working with the wushu federation in Australia and want to get wushu into the Olympics.

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