Olympic esports corruption: minutes expose IOC propaganda and incriminate Ser Miang Ng and his family business
As minutes suggest, senior IOC member Ser Miang Ng, who is also Honorary Chairman of World Taekwondo's Kukkiwon, has obviously been campaigning for Virtual Taekwondo, a game developed by his children's companies – with the aim of it being included in the Olympic Esports Games and other events.

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To media representatives: please do not steal everything without citing this source. This applies in particular to strange esports websites that stole all the facts from here since August 2025.
After I revealed the dubious machinations in Olympic esports a few weeks ago, centred around the clear conflicts of interest of IOC finance and personnel chief Ser Miang Ng, the IOC responded with its usual propaganda, without providing any kind of proof.
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The IOC countered the corruption allegations against high-ranking IOC member Ser Miang Ng, who also holds a kind of monopoly in numerous leadership positions related to Olympic esports and the planned Olympic Esports Games in Saudi Arabia, with unsubstantiated claims. None of my questions about the role of Ser Miang Ng, whose daughter Xuan Hui Ng and son Chong Geng Ng earn money from the Olympic esports business and IOC decisions through several companies (Refract Technologies and Pearl Trust) were answered in detail.
The well-documented and substantiated ethics complaint against Ser Miang Ng, which was filed almost three months ago by a London law firm, was dismissed as baseless by the IOC's propaganda department.
A few days after the articles appeared in SPORT & POLITICS and THE INQUISITOR, several media in Singapore and southeast Asia published the IOC's unsubstantiated statements in detail without conducting any substantial research of their own.

At the end of August, The Times of London picked up on the reports in this newsletter. The Times quoted from another letter from the London lawyers to the IOC and its own opaque, instruction-bound Ethics Commission:
"Your apparent determination to turn a blind eye to Mr Ng Ser Miang's obvious potential and actual conflicts of interest is deeply concerning and leads our client to question the integrity of the IOC Ethics Commission and its willingness to comply with its own rules."
The IOC again claimed, without evidence:
"There is no basis whatsoever for these claims, since there is full transparency through the IOC Declaration of Interests Form."
Of course, there is neither transparency nor complete transparency here.
There is not even the slightest hint of any transparency-like business conduct.
Nothing of the sort has been proven.
In cases like this, it would be a first in the history of the IOC.