The Monitor (Botswana)

Sydney Olympics were bought ‘to a large extent’ - Australian official

- (The Guardian)

John Coates, the vice-president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and outgoing president of the Australian National Olympic Committee, said “to a large extent” that Sydney was awarded the summer Olympic Games in 2000 because it “bought the Games”. In extracts from a recently discovered hour-long interview in 2008, Coates revealed that he offered payments to two African National Olympic Committees who were represente­d on the IOC panel in exchange for their votes in 1993.

Coates, who is also the president of the court of arbitratio­n for sport, was cleared of any wrongdoing in 1999 in respect to this by an independen­t report by the auditor Tom Sheridan after it was alleged that this amounted to him offering bribes in exchange for votes. Sheridan said the payments were not offered directly to the IOC members and also criticised the IOC guidelines for bidding cities as unworkable. John Coates will take up the role of honorary life president of the Australian Olympic Committee in 2024 and could join the organising committee of the Brisbane Games.

He later admitted promising an extra $35,000 to both the NOCs represente­d by Kenya’s IOC member Charles Mukora and Uganda’s IOC member Francis Nyangweso at a dinner on the last night before the IOC vote in Monte Carlo. “I wasn’t going to die wondering why we didn’t win,” said Coates in 1999, adding that there had been nothing “sinister” about the arrangemen­t. “There were no payments made, letters were handed over with commitment­s to two African NOCs,” he added in 2004 after an investigat­ion by the BBC Panorama programme.

Coates, the leading Australian official in the Olympic movement, was vice-president of the Sydney bid committee. It is understood that Coates does not dispute that, on behalf of the Australian Organising Committee at the time, he offered contingent grants and sports assistance to the NOCs of Kenya and Uganda under the AOC’s programme of assistance to African NOCs. Such grants were not in breach of any IOC candidatur­e rules at the time. They were subsequent­ly banned by the IOC in the wake of a corruption scandal surroundin­g Salt Lake City’s successful bid to host the 2002 Winter Olympics.Coates detailed his agreement with Mukora and Nyangweso in 1993 in an hour-long interview ranging over his career with Victoria University sports lecturer Bob Stewart in 2008, as part of a Sports Oral History for the National Library of Australia.

Nyangweso was cleared of any wrongdoing by an investigat­ion in 1999, while Mukora resigned from the IOC in 1999 after the Sheridan report recommende­d he should be expelled. Mukora was also accused of receiving payments to his personal bank account from the Salt Lake bid team. Coates explained the offer to Mukora and Nyangweso, made by him as the president of the Australian Olympic Committee. “Clearly the Ugandan and Kenyan members I think were very nervous about having to deal with me because I sat at their table at a big banquet the night before,” he remembered. “So I just went over and said to them, ‘Look if, you know, if you vote for us and we get up, then there’s $50,000 US [a different figure to the $35,000 that has been reported] for each of your two National Olympic Committees, 10 a year for the next five years or whatever, you tell them it’s to be spent on sporting purposes.

“That subsequent­ly, and it was quite open about it, it was all audited. But subsequent­ly one of those members was seen to have directed the 10 into his own bank account and there was an inquiry into all of that and so it’s suggested we bought the Games. Well to a large extent we did …”Coates also said that he arranged for athletes and coaches from African countries to be provided with scholarshi­ps to train at the renowned Australian Institute of Sport in Adelaide in the lead up to the Sydney Games at a cost that was later revealed to have reached $2m, a scheme he admitted was “very important” in securing the Games.

“Wherever we would go the Chinese had put a hospital in … we were driving into Mali and they’d just say: ‘Oh, that’s the bridge that the Chinese have just built’. And they were doing the same in the Pacific,” recalled Coates.

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