Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

IOC launches probe into world boxing body ills, threatens ban

- Agence Francepres­se

TOKYO: The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) froze preparatio­ns for boxing at the 2020 Games on Friday and launched a probe into the sport’s troubled governing body, warning that it could be stripped of the ability to organise the competitio­n.

The IOC stressed that it still wanted boxing to go ahead at Tokyo 2020 but said its inquiry into the Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n (AIBA) “can lead to withdrawal of (its) recognitio­n”.

But the IOC said it would make “all efforts to protect the athletes and ensure that a boxing tournament can take place at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 regardless of these measures”.

It added that it still had concerns over the “governance, ethics and financial management” of AIBA, which last month elected as president a controvers­ial Uzbek businessma­n linked to organised crime by the US Treasury Department, a claim he denies. IOC sports director Kit Mcconnell said qualifying for the 2020 boxing tournament had been put on hold, making it the only sport not to have its qualifiers approved.

“We are not going ahead, while the inquiry is under way, with any qualificat­ion system for the Olympic boxing competitio­n in Tokyo,” Mcconnell said.

Relations between the IOC and AIBA took a dive at the 2016 Rio Olympics when 36 officials and referees were suspended amid allegation­s of bout fixing.ties were further battered earlier this month when AIBA elected Gafur Rakhimov as leader, who strenuousl­y rejects the charges from the US Treasury Department.

AIBA made a last-ditch bid to persuade the IOC that it had cleaned up its act, issuing a flurry of statements lauding its own efforts on financing and judging.

It said a new judging system brought in after the Rio scandal had been “positively received by athletes and technical officials.”

The associatio­n also said that it had restored its finances to a healthy level and implemente­d “stringent” new controls to turn the page on previous mismanagem­ent. “The fear of going bankrupt due to past financial mismanagem­ent is now far behind us,” said Rakhimov in a statement released on Thursday.

“It is time to turn the page and look further to the developmen­t of boxing worldwide,” he added.

Earlier this month, Rakhimov insisted that boxing had “exceeded” the governance requiremen­ts that threaten its future at the Games. The sport is also “100 percent compliant with anti-doping rules” -- another concern from the IOC. AIBA submitted a report to the IOC in April with reforms it hoped would placate Olympic officials, but IOC president Thomas Bach said it “lacked execution and substance in some areas”.

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