The Manila Times

AIBA vote could see sport thrown out of Olympics

- MOSCOW:

The congress of the scandalhit Internatio­nal Amateur Boxing Federation ( AIBA) that begins in Moscow on Friday (Saturday in Manila) may be a turning point for the sport and its future in the Olympics.

Gafur Rakhimov, an Uzbek who has been linked to organised crime by the US Treasury Department, is one of two candidates standing for the position of AIBA president at the meeting.

Rakhimov has vigorously denied US government allegation­s but in October the Internatio­nal Olympics Committee (IOC) froze relations with AIBA and refused to accredit Rakhimov to the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires.

The IOC move made it clear that it was prepared to kick the AIBA out of the Olympic movement and remove boxing from the 2020 Tokyo Games if the “governance problems” in the ruling body were not resolved.

In February, the IOC said they were worried by the nomination of the Uzbek businessma­n for the AIBA interim presidency, a position he still occupies. Wu, ousted.

He was banned after a report by “forensic investigat­ors” K2 Intelligen­ce documented “gross negligence and financial mismanagem­ent of AIBA

member federation­s at the AIBA Congress in Moscow.

IOC president Thomas Bach said in February that he was “extremely worried about the governance of AIBA.”

And though amateur boxing’s

report on internal reforms to the IOC in April, the threat of losing a place in the Olympic movement remains.

“This report shows some progress and goodwill but still lacks execution and substance in some areas,” Bach said in May.

“Therefore we retain our right to exclude boxing from Tokyo 2020.”

The other candidate for the AIBA president post is Serik Konakbayev, a Kazakh who won the Olympic silver medal at Moscow Games in 1980 for the Soviet Union.

His participat­ion in the race was thrown into doubt this month when the AIBA election commission barred him for allegedly failing to submit certain forms by a deadline.

But Konakbayev lodged an appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, which ruled (CAS) against the AIBA decision.

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