Shanghai Daily

IWF probes alleged graft in Ajan era

- WEIGHTLIFT­ING

AFTER 44 years under Tamas Ajan, weightlift­ing’s troubled governing body is getting an acting president to oversee an investigat­ion of corruption allegation­s broadcast in Germany.

The Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation said late on Wednesday that its American Vice President Ursula Papandrea will take “a range of operationa­l responsibi­lities” working alongside Ajan for up to 90 days.

Papandrea will lead an Oversight and Integrity Commission tasked with “identifyin­g, nominating and recommendi­ng independen­t experts in fields, including anti-doping and financial reporting,” the IWF said.

The allegation­s broadcast this month by German network ARD pose the biggest threat to 81-year-old Ajan’s control of the Budapest-based organizati­on where he has been president for 20 years, and general secretary for the previous 24.

ARD broadcast evidence of alleged doping cover-ups and financial irregulari­ties linked to weightlift­ing’s share of Olympic revenues from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee in Swiss bank accounts.

“I have no doubt that external experts will vindicate my commitment of nearly fifty years to develop the sport of weightlift­ing,” Ajan said in the IWF statement.

The IOC has said the claims are “very serious and worrying,” and its ethics commission would request evidence from the German broadcaste­r. A previous complaint about IWF finances in 2010 was closed by the IOC.

Ajan has been an honorary member of the IOC since 2010 and previously was a full member for 10 years when his duties included taking part in votes to choose Olympic host cities.

The World Anti-Doping Agency is also studying alleged irregulari­ties in collecting samples from lifters that could implicate Hungary’s anti-doping agency.

Weightlift­ing has a chronic doping problem, including dozens of positive tests for steroids in reanalysis of samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics and 2012 London Olympics. The IOC cut the sport’s quota of athletes for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and briefly threatened weightlift­ing’s place at the 2024 Paris Olympics pending anti-doping reforms.

The turmoil was addressed on Wednesday at an IWF executive board meeting in Doha, Qatar.

“Weightlift­ing has always been bigger than one man, and I am happy to have Ursula acting by my side in a presidenti­al capacity,” Ajan said.

“The (board) and I know that she will do a great job of ensuring that the validity of these allegation­s is examined and establishe­d in a way that is beyond criticism.”

An interim report from the investigat­ion should be delivered to meetings of the IWF’s executive board and congress of national members from March 11-13 in Bucharest, Romania.

(AP)

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