Kuwait Times

Paris 2024: New era of corruption free Olympics?

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Ahead of the Paris Olympics in July and August, French prosecutor­s are working on four enquiries into possible wrongdoing, but are the investigat­ions a sign of problems or of genuine efforts to tackle graft?

Andy Spalding, an academic and author who studies corruption in sporting “mega-events” such as the Olympics or the football World Cup, believes French authoritie­s are showing they are serious about delivering a clean Games.

Three preliminar­y investigat­ions are into possible favouritis­m in the awarding of around 20 contracts worth tens of millions of euros, while a fourth — revealed on February 6 by AFP — is scrutinizi­ng the pay of chief organizer Tony Estanguet. In an interview with AFP, Spalding, a professor at the US-based University of Richmond School of Law, explained the troubled history of Olympic corruption and why he believes the Paris Games might spell the start of a “new era” of cleaner internatio­nal sport.

Question: When did corruption in the Olympics first come to wide public attention?

“The Salt Lake City Winter Olympics in 2002 was the first time in which there was hard evidence of corruption that went public. Pre-2002, we know there’s corruption. But we can’t prove it and the world is largely resigned to corruption.

Then in the late 1990s, there’s something sometimes called the “corruption eruption” — a period of time in which all of a sudden the world starts paying a lot of attention to corruption issues. There are new internatio­nal convention­s; there’s an explosion of scholarshi­p. There are scandals and resignatio­ns, new enforcemen­t initiative­s. What we saw in the ensuing Games was not just incidents of corruption, but systemic corruption. Russia with the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics was probably the most egregious example of this, where billions of dollars are estimated to have been embezzled in the course of the event.”

Question: What has been the effect on the Olympics movement?

“The corruption scandals have damaged the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee brand enormously. That was most obvious in 2015 at the time of the awarding of the 2022 Winter Games, when the only credible candidate, China, was a country that had almost no winter sports tradition. Other countries just didn’t want them because of the systemic corruption

and the cost overruns.

The IOC needs a sustainabl­e business model, so they adopted reforms, attacking the two different components of corruption: one is the corruption at the IOC level, particular­ly with the executive committee, meaning they needed to reform the bidding process. Then the second step was addressing corruption at the host level: the organising committee, the municipali­ty, the National Olympic Committee.”

Question: Part of that approach is a new “anti-corruption clause” in the contract with the Olympics host city. What is this?

“France is the first country to be under an enforceabl­e contractua­l obligation to adopt anti-corruption compliance programs. Nobody knows what it means yet, but starting with Paris, moving forward to the 2026 Winter Games and Los Angeles in 2028, we will have these contractua­l obligation­s each time.

You start with a contractua­l provision. The next step is to provide some guidance on what that means. Then we need operations and some enforcemen­t for breach of contract. When all of those steps are completed, then the clause will mean something. When any convention or statute is adopted, there is a lag before enforcemen­t. The statute that was the catalyst for global anti-corruption enforcemen­t, the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, was on the books for 25 years before we did anything with it.” — AFP

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