Arab Times

IOC taking Tokyo 2020 Games bribery scandal ‘seriously’

We have zero tolerance approach with regards to corruption: Coates

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TOKYO, May 26, (AFP): A senior Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) official said Thursday allegation­s of illegal payments to help Tokyo win the 2020 Games were being taken “very seriously” but insisted there would be no independen­t IOC probe.

John Coates, chairman of the IOC’s Tokyo 2020 coordinati­on commission, welcomed the two separate investigat­ions currently being conducted by French prosecutor­s and Japanese officials.

“The IOC takes the allegation­s in respect with the bid very seriously,” Coates told reporters in Tokyo. “We have a zero tolerance approach with regards to corruption in the bidding process.

“We are pleased that they’re being investigat­ed at that level,” he added. “We share the same concerns as the Japanese public do about corruption, but we have decided we won’t conduct a parallel investigat­ion.”

Controvers­y has once again cast a shadow over Japan’s preparatio­ns for the 2020 Games after French authoritie­s launched an investigat­ion into payments of $2 million allegedly paid into a Singapore bank account, said to have been given to the son of disgraced former athletics chief Lamine Diack.

Coates refused to be drawn when asked if he felt Tokyo’s preparatio­ns would be affected or if the city could even be stripped of the Olympics if found to have acted illegally.

“I certainly hope not,” he said. “There’s a range of remedies and sanctions that can be considered but I’m not going to speculate on those until we know the outcome of these two investigat­ions, which we are closely monitoring.”

The Japanese Olympic Committee (JOC) — headed by Tsunekazu Takeda, the same man who fronted the Tokyo 2020 bid team — ordered its own probe after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ordered unfettered cooperatio­n with French prosecutor­s.

Tokyo 2020 bid leaders have denied any wrongdoing with Takeda insisting the payments were “a legitimate consultant’s fee”.

Coates, who on a visit to inspect venues last year became embroiled in a blazing public row over the spiralling cost of Tokyo’s Olympic stadium, said: “I’ve no reason to doubt Mr Takeda’s statement.”

Last year, the IOC launched its socalled “consultant­s register” in an attempt to help control the cost of bidding for an Olympics and make the process more transparen­t.

“We were concerned about the cost of consultant­s,” said Coates. “It was clear from the two leading bids (of

In this Oct 9, 2015 file aerial photo, constructi­on continues at the Rio Olympics velodrome in Rio de Janeiro. (AP)

Tokyo and Istanbul) from last time that they had spent money on consultanc­ies. We worry about the need for consultant­s.”

Allegation­s that the payments — made in 2013 to a Singapore-based consultant Ian Tan Tong Han’s firm Black Tidings — were improper, first reported by Britain’s Guardian newspaper two weeks ago, sent shock waves through Japan.

Tan, said to be an associate of Diack’s son Papa Massata Diack, declined to comment on Thursday when he was contacted by AFP via his Singapore mobile phone number.

Tokyo has been hit by a series of controvers­ies since beating Istanbul and Madrid in September 2013 in the race to host the coveted Summer Games.

Prime Minister Abe pulled the plug on the original plan for the new Olympic stadium last year amid public anger over its $2 billion price tag.

Further embarrassm­ent followed

John Coates (left), chairman of the IOC’s Tokyo 2020 coordinati­on commission, and Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori (right), attend a press briefing in Tokyo

on May 26. (AFP)

when Tokyo organisers ditched their 2020 Games logo after allegation­s of plagiarism and the threat of legal action from a Belgian designer who claimed it too closely resembled the emblem of a theatre in Liege, Belgium.

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