Doping: Problems looming for 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, says Pound
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[January 09, 2021]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - The United States is in
violation of the Olympic charter and potentially the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) Code, raising questions over whether the
2028 Los Angeles Games should proceed, senior International Olympic
Committee member Dick Pound told Reuters on Friday.
When the U.S. Congress last October passed the Olympic Reform Bill
it gave lawmakers the power to dissolve the United States Olympic
Paralympic Committee (USOPC) board, setting it on a collision course
with the IOC.
The IOC charter prohibits government interference in National
Olympic Committees.
There are also problems brewing on the doping front with the U.S.
having said it will withdraw WADA funding unless a number of demands
are met, including more representation on boards and committees,
speedier reforms and greater transparency.
In response to that threat, WADA at its most recent Foundation Board
meeting in September said it would consider amending rules to punish
stakeholders who pull contributions.
Punishments could include finding delinquent nations non-compliant
with the WADA Code and potentially barred from hosting and
participating at the Olympic Games.
"We will have to wait and see but at some point if the U.S. becomes
a rogue state I think we will start looking at whether the Games in
Los Angeles should proceed," Pound, the IOC's senior member, told
Reuters.
"They are not performing their obligations under the convention and
they're trying to destabilize not only the structure but funding of
WADA and that's not acceptable behaviour especially since they
participated in all the decisions for continental funding right from
the beginning."
The U.S. is the largest single contributor to WADA, paying more than
$2.7 million into the 2020 budget of $37.4 million, half of which
comes from the IOC.
While the WADA dispute remains murky what is clear, according to
Pound, is the fact U.S. legislators are in conflict with IOC rules.
Should Congress step in and use its new authority and impose changes
within the USOPC it would set up a showdown with the IOC, which in
the past has suspended countries including Kuwait over government
interference.
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World Anti-Doping
Agency's (WADA) former president, Dick Pound, who heads the
commission into corruption and doping in athletics, gestures at a
news conference in Unterschleissheim near Munich, Germany, January
14, 2016. REUTERS/Michael Dalder/File Photo
FIFA, world soccer's governing body, has similar rules and used its
power to suspend several national associations.
"The Congressional legislation focusing on the U.S. Olympic
Committee gives Congress the power to rule over the board of
directors is on the statute books and is clearly a violation of the
Olympic charter, kind of like it is in Italy at the moment," Pound
added.
"All these things are not just going to go away just because it is
the U.S."
While the IOC has not been afraid to impose sanctions in the past
none of those countries possess the influence and financial clout of
the U.S. which provides the Olympic body with much of its income
through television rights and sponsorships.
With the Los Angles Olympics still seven years away, the U.S., IOC
and WADA will have time to sort out differences.
Making sure the COVID-19 delayed Tokyo Olympics come off this summer
has all of the IOC's immediate attention while human rights issue
could be in the spotlight ahead of the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.
But Pound warned that the U.S. and 2028 Los Angeles Games will
become an increasing focus.
"Not so much at this point because the principal effort now is
trying to make sure that we find a way to have the Games in Tokyo,"
said Pound. "But as that picture evolves this kind of thing (2028
Olympics) is going to bubble up to the surface."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Editing by Christian
Radnedge)
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