IOC approves exclusion of boxing
body from Tokyo 2020 Games
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[June 26, 2019]
By Karolos Grohmann
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) - The
International Olympic Committee on Wednesday officially took over
the boxing qualification and competition for next year's Tokyo 2020
Olympics and suspended international boxing federation AIBA
following a vote at its session.
The IOC voted unanimously to implement a recommendation of its
executive board to oust troubled AIBA from the Tokyo 2020 Games over
issues surrounding its finances and governance and suspend the body
until the issues are resolved.
AIBA has been in turmoil over its finances and governance for years
with the federation $16 million in debt and an ongoing bitter battle
over the presidency that has split the body internally.
Serbian IOC member Nenad Lalovic, who heads an IOC task force to
look into the ties with AIBA, earlier on Wednesday delivered a
damning report to the IOC session, saying the association could
reach a debt of as much as $29 million.
He also said AIBA had failed to reform at the top of the
organization.
AIBA president Gafur Rahimov suspended himself from the post in
March because of his presence on an U.S. Treasury Department
sanctions list "for providing material support" to a criminal
organization. The Uzbek strongly denies the allegations.
Rahimov's presence on that sanctions list was extremely damaging to
the IOC though he has been replaced on an interim basis by Mohamed
Moustahsane.
"It exposes the IOC and its commercial partners to unacceptable
reputational, legal and financial risks," Lalovic said.
He said AIBA's debt meant money would not go to sports and the
athletes in the future and the organization still faced problems
with refereeing.
START FROM SCRATCH
Among those voting in favor of the exclusion was former AIBA
President CK Wu, who was Rahimov's predecessor before stepping down
in 2017 after a bitter dispute with his own executive committee.
"I think that today... all members of the AIBA Executive Committee
will understand that we need to unite and say goodbye to the old,"
AIBA executive committee member Umar Kremlev said in a statement.
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Guest are seen in front of the Olympic House, the new International
Olympic Committee (IOC) headquarters, after the inauguration
ceremony in Lausanne, Switzlerland June 23, 2019 ahead of the
decision on 2026 Winter Games host. Fabrice Coffrini/Pool via
REUTERS
"Everyone guilty of what brought AIBA to this, must confess,
apologize to the boxing community and leave. Our task, as members of
the AIBA executive committee, is to unite, to accept early reforms
and to start everything from scratch together to bring boxing back
to a high level."
AIBA largely depends on Olympic Games revenues to survive between
Games and has started letting people go as a result of its Olympic
exclusion. The sport's governing body will discuss the IOC decision
at its executive committee meeting on Thursday.
Japanese IOC member Morinari Watanabe, president of the
international gymnastics federation, heads the task force to
organize qualifiers and the Tokyo Games competition.
The IOC will almost treble the number of women boxers in Tokyo to
100, up from 36 at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. Men's numbers will
be reduced from 250 to 186 with the total of 286 boxers remaining
identical from Rio.
There will be four regional qualifiers -- Africa, Europe,
Asia/Oceania and Americas -- between January and April 2020 while
hosts Japan can directly qualify four men and two women.
A final Olympic qualifying event will probably be held in May next
year to allow athletes a second chance to qualify, the IOC has said.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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