Hindustan Times (Patiala)

IOC meet to ponder over fate of boxing as Olympic sport

- Agence FrancePres­se n sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

Top IOC officials will from Friday weigh the future of boxing as an Olympic event at a meeting in Tokyo expected to be dominated by concerns over the sport’s governance.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee holds a two-day gathering in the 2020 Summer Games host city after its president said he was “extremely worried about the governance of AIBA”, the Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n.Thomas Bach said earlier this year that a report handed to the IOC in April “still lacks execution and substance in some areas” and that his organisati­on “retains the right to exclude boxing from Tokyo 2020”.

This month, AIBA submitted an updated report it hopes will address the concerns and IOC officials are expected to decide boxing’s fate, with some reports indicating the 2020 competitio­n could be run under the auspices of a different body. The IOC has been losing patience with boxing since a judging scandal at the Rio Games in 2016 when all 36 officials and referees were suspended amid allegation­s of bout-fixing.

There are also concerns over AIBA’s finances, anti-doping, and its controvers­ial newly elected president Gafur Rakhimov, who has been linked to organised crime by the US Treasury Department.

“The truth is that I, of course, have never been involved in transnatio­nal criminal organisati­ons,” Rakhimov said, calling his presence on a US Treasury list a “mistake”.

The Uzbek businessma­n said last week that boxing has cleaned up its act and now “exceeded the governance requiremen­t for change”.AIBA’s financial situation is now “under control”, amateur boxing is “100 percent compliant with anti-doping rules” and “boxing will always stay in the Olympics”, added the 67-yearold.

Regardless of the IOC’s final decision, Bach has stressed that boxers will not suffer from problems faced by its governing body.

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