The Borneo Post

Boxing body AIBA claims progress in IOC plea

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LAUSANNE: The under-pressure Internatio­nal Boxing Federation ( AIBA), which is fighting to keep its sport on the 2020 Tokyo Olympic roster after a storm of corruption allegation­s, has told the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee that swift progress is being made on cleaning up the sport.

Boxing’s inclusion in Tokyo depends on the outcome of an investigat­ion into AIBA by the IOC, which has presented the body with a list of 41 questions via audit firm Deloitte.

AIBA leader Gafur Rakhimov stepped down as head last week, which the IOC deemed as merely the first step in a long march towards the required standards.

But on Wednesday, the AIBA made a plea to the IOC, saying significan­t progress had been made on their accounting and claiming that the body would collapse without IOC support.

The IOC has suspended AIBA’s Olympic qualificat­ion process and may take control of that process itself.

Ducking and weaving for its survival, the AIBA says it should be given the chance to turn things around.

“Considerin­g where we were one year ago, AIBA has made significan­t progress towards reducing its debt and has gone from a negative cash flow of over 2,000,000 annually, to a positive cash f low,” AIBA executive director Tom Virgets said in a report.

Virgets said of the report that the AIBA “is dependent on the Olympic dollars” for its survival.

“With the Olympic money AIBA will have the financial resources to not only meet its obligation­s, but also eliminate AIBA’s debt and create positive equity by 2024,” he said.

“Once the IOC allows AIBA to move forward as the Olympic governing body, AIBA will be able to reduce our debt by an additional 4- 5 million over the next 12 months.”

Relations between the IOC and AIBA were hit hard at the 2016 Rio Olympics when 36 officials and referees were suspended amid allegation­s of bout fixing.

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