Qatar Tribune

Boardroom putsch threatens weightlift­ing’s Olympic status

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THE place of weightlift­ing at the 2024 Paris Olympics is under threat after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said on Wednesday it was “very worried” about the boardroom putsch that ousted the interim president of the sport’s governing body.

Ursula Papandrea of the US, who became the first woman to head the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation (IWF) when she took over in January, was removed after an executive board vote at an emergency meeting on Tuesday.

“The IOC is very worried to learn about the reported decision made by the Board of the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation to replace the Acting President, Ms Ursula Garza Papandrea, the way the decision was taken and the chosen replacemen­t,” the IOC said in a statement.

“The IOC enjoyed excellent cooperatio­n with her during her time in office, and is fully supportive of the reforms she has initiated in the IWF.”

The IOC did not name her replacemen­t but the CEO of USA Weightlift­ing Phil Andrews announced in a statement released in his own name that Papandrea had been replaced by Intarat Yodbangtoe­y from Thailand. The appointmen­t of Yodbangtoe­y comes despite the fact that Thai weightlift­ers will be barred from the Tokyo Olympics because of too many doping cases.

Andrews said he was resigning as Interim Deputy Director General of the IWF, saying: “It has became clear over recent months that not everyone has the best interests of the sport in mind and our attempts to reform the sport have been met with incredible resistance.”

The IOC said the power grab “and its consequenc­es will, of course, be taken into considerat­ion by the IOC executive board”. The Olympic body had already threatened last week to “reconsider the place of weightlift­ing on the programme of the Olympic Games in Paris 2024”.

In December it must make a final decision on the events and quotas of athletes for the Paris Olympics. Weightlift­ing has been in turmoil since January when German TV channel ARD broadcast a documentar­y which revealed what it described as a “culture of corruption” in the sport intended to mask the use of doping. The Hungarian Tamas Ajan, 81, chairman of the IWF for 20 years after serving as its secretary general, rejected the accusation­s as “lies” before being pressured into resigning in April. He had originally stepped aside for 90 days while an investigat­ion set about examining the ARD claims which largely focused on him.

According to the documentar­y, until 2017 high-level weightlift­ers were being exempted from many doping controls, and test results were being altered in exchange for bribes.

ARD also referred to documents showing that nearly 4.5 million euros ($4.9 million) paid to the IWF by the IOC were transferre­d to accounts in Switzerlan­d over which Ajan alone exercises control.

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