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No medal for player toting political poster

A South Korean soccer player who held up a sign with a political message after a victory over Japan did not get a bronze Saturday when the Olympic medals were handed out in a ceremony to the rest of his team.
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South Korea's Park Jong-woo holds a sign that reads "Dokdo is our territory" after his team's 2-0 victory over Japan in their men's bronze-medal soccer match Friday.

A South Korean soccer player who held up a sign with a political message after a victory over Japan did not get a bronze Saturday when the Olympic medals were handed out in a ceremony to the rest of his team.

Midfielder Park Jong-woo is under investigation by the IOC and football's governing body, FIFA, for displaying the sign with a slogan supporting South Korean sovereignty over disputed islets that are claimed by both his country and Japan. The largely uninhabited islets are called Dokdo by South Koreans and Takeshima by Japanese.

The IOC and FIFA have statutes that prohibit political statements by athletes and players. Olympic officials had asked the South Korean Olympic Committee to take action against Park and that he not be present at the ceremony.

When the men's soccer medals were presented at Wembley Stadium following Mexico's 2-1 win over Brazil in the gold-medal match, only 17 of the 18 South Korean players were on the field for the ceremony.

Park was not among them.

The IOC had begun an investigation into Park's actions, and FIFA said it has opened a separate investigation to discipline the athlete.

South Korea defeated Japan 2-0 in Cardiff, Wales, on Friday, hours after President Lee Myung-bak raised diplomatic tensions by travelling to the islets. The presidential visit prompted Japan to recall its ambassador from Seoul.

South Korea stations a small contingent of police officers on the islets in a show of control, but Japan maintains that the rocks are its territory. Tokyo renewed the claim last month in a defence report.

During his visit Friday, Lee reportedly told police officers there that the islets are "worth sacrificing lives for," according to the presidential office.

Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba said it was "incomprehensible why [Lee] would make this trip at this time,"

On Wednesday, South Korea will commemorate the peninsula's independence in 1945 from 35 years of Japanese colonial rule.