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			Australian Olympic Committee chief Coates says victim of 
			'vindictive' campaign 
			
		 
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			 [April 25, 2017] 
			(Reuters) - Australian Olympic 
			Committee President John Coates has said that allegations of 
			bullying leveled against his long-serving lieutenant Mike Tancred 
			are part of a "vindictive" campaign aimed at bringing his 27-year 
			reign to an end. 
			 
			Coates, an International Olympic Committee vice president and one of 
			the most powerful sports administrators in the world, is facing the 
			first challenge to his leadership since he assumed the role in 1990. 
			 
			Olympic hockey gold medalist Danni Roche is standing against Coates 
			in the presidential election at the annual general meeting on May 6. 
			 
			In a letter to the AOC executive and national sporting 
			organizations, and published by News Corp., Coates said the bullying 
			allegations were defamatory, false and "maliciously" published, 
			Australian Associated Press reported on Tuesday. 
			 
			Media and communications director Tancred is the subject of a formal 
			complaint by former CEO Fiona de Jong, who departed the AOC in 
			December. She told local media the AOC was dragging its feet on an 
			investigation into her complaint. 
			 
			Ryan Wells, another former AOC staffer, has detailed a separate 
			allegation of bullying against Tancred when working in its media 
			department in 2004. 
			
			
			  
			
			Tancred declined to comment when contacted by Reuters about the 
			allegations. 
			 
			Coates said the complaint had been dealt with as a matter of 
			"urgency". 
			 
			"Specifically regarding the complaint made by Fiona De Jong, I 
			assure you due process has been followed and followed with urgency," 
			he wrote. 
			 
			Coates said he was disappointed by a "malicious" campaign against 
			him. 
			 
			"There is clearly a coordinated and sadly vindictive campaign to 
			damage me personally, and to tarnish all that has been achieved at 
			the AOC," Coates said in the letter. 
			 
			"This campaign is as disappointing as it is unfounded." 
			 
			
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			International Olympic Committee (IOC) Vice President and Chairman of 
			the Coordination Commission for the Tokyo 2020 Games John Coates 
			attends a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, December 2, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon 
            
			  
			Coates said an AOC executive meeting that has been called for this 
			week would be a "sensible discussion" about the issues. 
			 
			Coates, a former rowing cox, played an integral role in Australia 
			winning the right to host the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney and 
			delivering a highly successful Games. 
			 
			The 66-year-old is also the head of the IOC's coordination 
			commission for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and president of the Court of 
			Arbitration for Sport. 
			 
			He has, though, become embroiled in a public feud with the 
			Australian Sports Commission (ASC) head John Wylie since the Rio 
			Olympics and has accused the head of the Australian Institute of 
			Sport (AIS), Matt Favier, of plotting to depose him. 
			 
			Coates' opponent in the election Roche, who sits on the board of the 
			ASC, has said her goal would be to build bridges between the various 
			stakeholders in the Australian sports environment. 
			 
			She has also taken aim at the A$700,000 Coates receives each year as 
			a consultancy fee, saying she would work for free. 
			 
			(Writing by Peter Rutherford; Editing by Sudipto Ganguly) 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All 
			rights reserved.] 
			Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights 
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			or redistributed. 
			
			
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