The Evening Leader

IOC to consider placing Italy on probation for interferen­ce

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ROME (AP) — The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee will consider imposing a humiliatin­g probation on Italy’s team for the Tokyo Games this week because of a two-year domestic dispute that it says amounts to government interferen­ce.

The IOC has taken issue with the Italian government’s formation of a new organizati­on, “Sport e Salute,” that was created at the start of 2019 to run the country’s sports finances. The money was previously controlled by an arm of the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI).

“The Olympic Charter categorica­lly prohibits an Olympic committee from being operated by the government and right now Sport e Salute is an operating branch of the government,” CONI president

Giovanni Malagò said.

Possible punishment­s from the IOC could include preventing Italian athletes in Tokyo from wearing their national team uniforms and from hearing their national anthem being played.

A last-minute change from the government was virtually ruled out with Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte intending to offer his resignatio­n on Tuesday amid a separate political crisis, his office said Monday.

The embarrassi­ng prospect of probation would lump Italy together with Russia, which last month was banned from using its name, flag and anthem at the next two Olympics or at any world championsh­ips for the next two years in fallout from a state-backed doping scandal.

Internatio­nal bodies such as the IOC and FIFA typically threaten national affiliates with suspension to protect sports officials’ decision-making power from lawmakers.

Kuwait competed at the 2016 Rio de Janiero Olympics as “Independen­t Olympic Athletes” under the Olympic flag and anthem during a similar dispute over government interferen­ce.

The “Olympic Athletes from Russia” team name was used at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games because of the doping scandal.

In the first of two warning letters that IOC president Thomas Bach wrote to Conte late last year, he noted that “significan­t legal and structural changes have been imposed on the national Olympic committee of Italy.”

“They unfortunat­ely no longer allow CONI to fully perform its role as an IOC-recognized national Olympic committee and to operate in accordance with the Olympic charter,” Bach added.

The IOC president also suggested that the supposed interferen­ce could — under extreme circumstan­ces — result in Italy being stripped of hosting rights for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo.

CONI has traditiona­lly run all sports in Italy, deciding how to divide up millions of dollars of state funding to each of the country’s national sports federation­s. Now, “Sport e Salute” handles that responsibi­lity, with 280 million euros ($325 million) handed out for 2020.

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