Indonesian TV pulls wrestling after child imitator dies (CNN.com, 11/30/06)

from CNN.com - 
An Indonesian boy looks at a poster of U.S. wrestling star John Cena at a toy stall on a Jakarta, Indonesia, street on Thursday (CNN.com).
Philippines
December 21, 2006 9:56pm CST
GUYS, I DONT KNOW IF YOU ALREADY HEARD OR READ ABOUT THIS NEWS! JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- An Indonesian television station pulled several popular U.S. wrestling programs off the air amid allegations that a 9-year-old boy may have been killed by children imitating the staged moves. The cause of Reza Fadillah's death has not yet been determined, but the Stamford, Connecticut-based World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. issued a statement saying it was "confident" its shows had nothing to do with the fatality. Lativi TV pulled "SmackDown" and all other WWE programs as of Wednesday following weeks of pressure from parents and educators who said the shows encouraged violent behavior in children, said Linda Rifai, a spokeswoman for the station. She declined to say if the move was temporary or permanent. Reza died on November 16 in the West Java city of Bandung -- several weeks after three of his friends threw him to the ground and pinned him "SmackDown-style," his father, Herman Suratman, said Thursday. He said the boy's X-rays showed internal chest wounds."Let my son be the last victim," he told The Associated Press. "This is a lesson, not only for Lativi and the government, but also for us parents to pay more attention to our children.""In this era of multimedia, bad influences can easily reach our boys and girls."The parents of a 4-year-old boy and at least eight other elementary school students have filed complaints saying their children also suffered injuries, from broken bones to vomiting blood, after practicing "SmackDown" moves. Lativi was the only Indonesian station to air the wrestling programs, which were broadcast six nights a week for four consecutive hours. Rifai said the shows were pulled "to avoid stoking controversy" and should not be seen as an admission by Lativi that they were linked in any way to Reza's death. Pediatrics magazine published a study in August that said teenagers who watched pro-wrestling were more likely to behave violently than those who did not. The findings were based on a survey of some 2,000 students at U.S. public high schools in 1999 and 2000. It did not look at younger children. Dr. Simon Marcus Gower, a child development specialist with Australia's University of New South Wales, called Lativi's decision to scrap the shows "a step in the right direction."But parents also had a role to play, he said."Appropriate supervision of children's viewing habits must surely be a bigger part of the answer," said Gower, who heads the university's Jakarta program. -9-year-old may have been fatally injured when friends imitated moves. -World Wrestling Entertainment says shows not responsible. -Indonesian station showed "SmackDown," other wrestling four hours a night. SOURCE: www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/11/30
1 person likes this
3 responses
5 Jan 07
The Manuavers of professional wrestling are so much attractive that the children, who watch wwe or other professional wrestling will always want to try those moves on friends or brothers and sisters. The children does not know that wwe is just a made-up reality TV show.
@virky0391 (566)
• Indonesia
26 Dec 06
I've heard it. Of course you have read, children try to do same 'Smack Down' move like they see on tv. Now, the station which broadcast smack down, Lativi, hasn;t broadcast it again. It's very dangerous.
@ramya186 (949)
• India
22 Dec 06
wrestling TV show under fire.jpg - wrestling TV show under fire.jpg
hhell i hate this wrestligwhy a man is beating another man for oney wats it ..it should be completely banned .instead they can show world strongest man shows