The Phnom Penh Post

Rakhimov elected president of boxing body

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CONTROVERS­IAL Uzbek businessma­n Gafur Rakhimov was elected president of the Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n (AIBA) on Saturday despite fears that his appointmen­t could lead to the sport’s ejection from the Olympic Games.

Rakhimov won 86 of the 134 second-round votes in the ballot in Moscow to KO his only opponent, former boxer Serik Konakbayev of Kazakhstan.

Rakhimov, previously interim president, courted controvers­y after being linked to organised crime by the US Treasury Department.

He has vigorously denied the allegation­s telling AFP in a recent interview that he had “never been involved in transnatio­nal criminal organisati­ons or what- ever has been said about me”.

He called his presence on the US Treasury list a “mistake” and hoped it would be “corrected” within six months.

But in October the Internatio­nal Olympic Commitee (IOC) froze relations with the AIBA and refused to accredit the 67-year-old for the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires.

IOC president Thomas Bach said in February that he was “extremely worried about the governance of AIBA”.

And though amateur boxing’s under-fire chiefs handed over a crucial report on internal reforms to the IOC in April, the threat of losing a place in the Olympic movement remains.

On the eve of his election, Rakhimov assured delegates and fans that “boxing will naturally be at the Olympic Games in 2020, Paris in 2024 and Los Angeles in 2028”.

Saturday’s election was delayed several hours after a glitch in the AIBA’s electronic voting system. A secret vote only went ahead after the AIBA was able to get its hands on a replacemen­t ballot box.

AIBA’s decisions

Until last week, Rakhimov was the only presidenti­al candidate after Konakbayev, who won silver at the Moscow Games in 1980 for the Soviet Union, was barred from standing by an AIBA election commission for allegedly failing to submit certain forms by a deadline.

Konakbayev lodged an appeal with the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport and last Tuesday’s decision by sports’ top arbitratio­n court ruled in his favour.

The IOC has been losing patience with boxing since a judging scandal at the 2016 Rio Games when all 36 officials and referees were suspended while allegation­s of bout-fixing were investigat­ed.

An internal power struggle then saw the previous president, Taiwan’s CK Wu, ousted.

The IOC said on Saturday that it took “notice of the decisions taken by the AIBA”.

“The IOC has made it clear from the outset that there are issues of grave concern with AIBA regarding judging, finance, and the anti-doping programme, and with governance – which includes but is not limited to the election of the AIBA president,” a spokesman said.

“As planned, we will now carefully evaluate all these areas at the next IOC Executive Board meeting in Tokyo [from November to 30 December 2].”

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