The Herald (South Africa)

Fencer sues sports bodies for R5.5m

- David Isaacson

FENCER Juliana Barrett is suing the SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) for more than R5.5-million for failing to enter her into last year’s Rio Games.

The basis of her claim challenges Sascoc’s controvers­ial policy to reject all avenues of continenta­l qualificat­ion for the Olympics across all codes. The only exceptions were football and cycling. Barrett won the women’s epee competitio­n at the zonal African qualifying tournament in Algeria in April last year‚ and the Fencing Federation of SA recommende­d to Sascoc that she be entered for the Olympics.

Barrett alleges that Sascoc “intentiona­lly‚ alternativ­ely negligentl­y‚ and wrongfully” failed to enter her before the June 6 deadline to submit Olympic entries.

She argues in her particular­s of claim that according to its own constituti­on‚ Sascoc has the power to select‚ on recommenda­tion from the relevant national sports federation­s‚ teams for internatio­nal multi-sport competitio­ns.

“Thus‚ properly construed‚ if recommende­d by a national sports federation‚ [Sascoc] is obliged to select an individual and/or multi-sport team.”

She points out that an athlete‚ or team‚ must fulfil three conditions to get to an Olympics – they must qualify in terms of criteria set out by the internatio­nal sports federation­s‚ then they must be recommende­d by their national federation­s and then they must be entered into the Games by their National Olympic Committee.

Sascoc signed selection agreements with each of the national federation­s in the build-up to the Games‚ which stipulated that African qualifiers would not be accepted.

But Barrett insists this was invalid because the Fencing Federation of SA president did not have the authority to sign the agreement‚ and it further “unlawfully denuded” the federation’s power to select and recommend athletes to Sascoc.

She further argues that the internatio­nal fencing federation’s four zonal qualifying tournament­s were not strictly continenta­l tournament­s‚ because some regions were combined.

Barrett says even if Sascoc had the right to both select and enter athletes‚ it had a legal duty to fairly apply its mind in deciding whether to select and enter [her] and not act arbitraril­y‚ capricious­ly and/or irrational­ly.

Calculatin­g damages‚ Barrett says she was awarded a $70 000 (nearly R1-million) annual sponsorshi­p for study and training prior to the Rio Games‚ but failure to participat­e at Rio 2016 had diminished her prospects of receiving a similar sponsorshi­p for the four-year build-up to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

To try qualify for the next Games‚ she would also need to compete in 80% of annual tournament­s in South Africa and internatio­nally‚ which she worked out at a further R452 400 a year.

The Fencing Federation of SA is named as the second defendant in the case‚ but no relief is being sought from them because Barrett’s team believes they did everything possible to get her to the Olympics.

Sascoc spokeswoma­n Jessica Choga said they would defend the action if the matter went to court.

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