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Published 14:39 IST, December 13th 2023

Nozomi Okuhara shares harrowing experience upon reaching India, BAI says 'didn't receive any email'

Shuttler Nozomi Okuhara, a former world champion and Olympic medallist, describes her painful experience upon landing in India. BAI general secretary Sanjay Mishra has responded to the situation.

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Nozomi Okuhara
Nozomi Okuhara in action | Image: X/@Badminton_Asia

Former world champion and Olympic medallist shuttler Nozomi Okuhara's harrowing experience after her touchdown in India was "unfortunate and won't happen in future", an embarrassed Badminton Association of India (BAI) general secretary Sanjay Mishra said on Wednesday.

However in local organizing committee's defence, the all-powerful BAI secretary general said that the ace Japanese shuttler didn't send any e-mail informing the logistical details (local travel and accommodation) which could have ensured proper arrangement prior to her arrival.

"I understand what Okuhara must have been through but the fact is we didn't receive any email regarding accommodation or transportation from her end. It is a technical issue and a matter of miscommunication. We had no information," Mishra told PTI.

The 28-year-old Okuhara, took to the social media platform fansnet.jp to narrate her ordeal after being harassed and duped by cab drivers at Delhi airport and not getting any official transportation after arriving in Cuttack on Monday to play the Odisha Open.

She also had to wait for four hours to check in at the hotel and wasn't provided with a shuttle bus/car for her scheduled 8 am practice session.

Terming it as an unfortunate incident, Mishra promised that nothing of this sort will happen in future.

"It is unfortunate but the moment I came to know about it I spoke to the organisers and provided all help. She is a big player and our guest and we will ensure nothing of this sort happens in future." A former world No. 1, Okuhara, who claimed the Syed Modi International Super 300 title in Lucknow and skipped the Guwahati event next week, had arrived in New Delhi via Hong Kong on Sunday night.

It was then her ordeal started. First, a stranger put her luggage on a trolley at the Delhi airport and then she was duped by a private taxi driver as she ended up paying 10 times more than what an Uber would have cost her to reach a nearby hotel from the airport for an overnight stay.

Arrangements are done for team and not individual

On his part, Mishra also said that such an incident wouldn't have occurred in first place if it was an entire contingent travelling because the manager of the squad then takes care of the logistical details. "If it is an entire team then the team manager contacts the organising committee and things are arranged immediately but she was alone and she didn't contact, so organisers didn't know when she was arriving. It didn't happen on purpose, it happened by mistake," Mishra said.

"After arriving in Delhi, she (Okuhara) could have just called someone like an organising secretary or competition manager. It happens sometimes when we travel overseas for an event and there is no one to receive. Nevertheless, it won't happen again." Organising secretary Nileen Kumar, who is also a BAI executive council member, said she had met Okuhara at the hotel but was a bit brazen in his attempt to justify, what they think is an unintentional mistake.

"I saw her sitting there in the hotel lobby. BAI joint secretary Prabhakar Rao was also there and we offered our help.

"Players have to send requests for accommodation in a BWF form but we didn't receive any such communication from her. It is the same for everyone. Since there was no request, there was no room booked for her. Other players, who came from 30 other countries didn't face any such problem," Kumar said.

You don't get shuttle bus if you don't stay in official hotel

It was Okuhara's Indian friends, famed shuttlers HS Prannoy and PV Sindhu, who spoke to local members and organised for her accommodation. Prannoy, a world medallist himself also arranged a car which would take her to training as she wasn't provided with a shuttle bus allocated for players.

Kumar, the BAI EC member reasoned that Okuhara is only entitled to a shuttle bus pick-up if she is staying in the official team hotel, where she didn't have a booking, having not filled up the form.

"If you stay in the official hotel, then only you get a shuttle bus it is not possible for the organiser to get players from other hotels across the city," Kumar said.

This is not the first incident as other international shuttlers have also complained about various things over the last three weeks, which saw India hosting Syed Modi International in Lucknow, Guwahati Masters and Odisha Open.

Malaysian Soong Joo Ven had taken to 'X' On December 7, posting a video of muddy brown water coming from a tap in his hotel in Guwahati, while Jessica Tan of Singapore had shared pictures of pigeon poop on the match courts in Lucknow.

Updated 15:56 IST, December 26th 2023