The Borneo Post

Weightlift­ing happy as IOC softens stance on Paris Games

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LAUSANNE: The Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation (IWF) on Wednesday welcomed to a decision by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to provisiona­lly lift the sport’s conditiona­l status for the Paris 2024 Games.

The IOC Executive Board had on Tuesday softened its position on the drug-plagued sport which threatens its exclusion from the Olympics.

The board, on the first day of its three- day meeting in Lausanne, said that because of the work the IWF had done it would “lift the status of conditiona­l inclusion”.

But, the IOC added, that was conditiona­l on the finalisati­on of an agreement between the sport and the Internatio­nal Testing Agency and “confirmati­on of a successful transition of key areas of the IWF’s anti- doping programme”.

The IOC said it anticipate­d a signature of an accord between the IWF and ITA “in the coming days”.

“Failing which, the conditiona­l inclusion of weightlift­ing... will be maintained and reconsider­ed” in June, said the IOC.

Five weightlift­ers were banned in December after retests of samples from 2012, taking the sport’s total for the L ondon Games to 24.

In January, the IWF announced that eight Thai weightlift­ers had failed tests or retests on samples taken at the World Championsh­ips in November, including two Rio 2016 gold medallists – Sopita Tanasan and Sukanya Srisurat.

The IOC acknowledg­ed the spate of recent positive tests might “negatively impact the perception that weightlift­ing has become cleaner” but added that many of these failed tests were the result of reforms by the IWF.

IWF rules say that a nation with three or more positives in a calendar year faces a ban of up to four years, but Thailand voluntaril­y banned itself from the 2019 world championsh­ips, which it is hosting, and from the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. That also drew praise from the IOC.

The IWF r e s p onde d on Wednesday that it “welcomes the support of the IOC”.

“The IWF’s commitment to clean competitio­n has transforme­d our sport,” said its president, Tamas Ajan, in a press release on Wednesday.

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