Weightlifting: USA, Britain slam ousting of IWF interim president
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[October 15, 2020]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - USA Weightlifting
has condemned the 'outrageous' ousting of American Ursula Garza
Papandrea as interim president of the world governing body, warning
that the troubled sport's future was at stake.
They were joined in protest by Britain's BWL governing body, which
called for the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF)
executive board to stand down with immediate effect and start a new
electoral process.
Papandrea, who was overseeing reform at a sport that risks being
dropped from the Olympics after next year's Tokyo Games due to
doping and corruption scandals, was replaced by Thailand's Intarat
Yodbangtoey on Tuesday.
USA Weightlifting said it had written to the sport's 187 member
federations demanding the IWF convene an extraordinary congress by
the end of November.
The American federation's board had earlier issued a strong
statement saying the removal of Papandrea and departure of interim
deputy director general Phil Andrews, USA Weightlifting's CEO, was a
"dark day" for the sport.
"We are disgusted and outraged that a majority of the IWF Executive
Board continues to block efforts to create real and substantive
change in the areas of governance, anti-doping reform and Athlete
representation," it said.
"These transparently corrupt actions serve only one purpose:
rewarding and empowering nations who can only win by cheating."
The BWL expressed 'huge disappointment' in a separate statement
http://www.britishweightlifting.org.
"The Executive Board are clearly failing the sport, its member
federations and most importantly its athletes and has done so for
many years," it said.
"The ideals of clean sport and fair play are under attack. It is
disheartening that a majority of the IWF Executive Board wishes to
see weightlifting return to an era where cheating was the norm and
the voices of clean athletes silenced."
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The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said on Wednesday it was
'very worried' by the replacement of Papandrea, the way the decision
had been taken and the chosen replacement.
Thai weightlifters are banned from the Tokyo Games due to a high
number of doping cases.
The BWL said seven of 19 members of the latest IWF board are from
countries barred from the Olympics or able to send only reduced
teams due to doping violations.
The IWF said on its website that its executive board had revoked
Papandrea's appointment at an emergency meeting, without giving a
reason, but said she remained a vice-president.
It said the board would meet again soon to consider the position of
Interim President.
The IWF elected Papandrea in January after 81-year-old president
Tamas Ajan, a Hungarian, resigned during a corruption probe. Ajan
had been at the IWF for 44 years as general secretary and president.
Richard McLaren, the Canadian law professor whose findings in July
2016 led to Russia being banned from all international athletic
competitions, including the Rio Olympics, told reporters in June
that the IWF was rife with corruption.
This included vote buying, doping cover-ups and $10.4 million in
cash that cannot be accounted for. Ajan denied any wrongdoing.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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