New Straits Times

AIBA bans exboss for life

-

LAUSANNE: The Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n (AIBA) has slapped a life ban on its former boss for “gross negligence and financial mismanagem­ent” as the crisis-wracked sport’s Olympic future comes under the spotlight.

The AIBA Executive Committee issued a statement on Tuesday saying it had decided to ban Taiwanese ex-president CK Wu and former executive director Ho Kim of South Korea for life.

An internal power struggle earlier this year saw Taiwan’s Wu ousted and controvers­ial Uzbek businessma­n Gafur Rakhimov — who has always vigorously denied US government allegation­s of links to organised crime — installed as interim president.

Wu was banned after a report by “forensic investigat­ors” K2 Intelligen­ce documented “gross negligence and financial mismanagem­ent of AIBA affairs and finances“, said the statement.

The ban will need to be ratified by member federation­s at the AIBA Congress in Moscow in November where the boxing governing body’s new president is due to be elected.

A report on website Insidetheg­ames.biz this week said Rakhimov would be the only candidate after his one presidenti­al rival, Kazakhstan’s Serik Konakbayev, failed to get the required 20 letters of support from member federation­s.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) has threatened to exclude boxing from the Tokyo 2020 Olympics if Rakhimov is elected.

AIBA is expected to be discussed by the IOC Executive Committee when it begins a twoday meeting in Buenos Aires yesterday.

Meanwhile AIBA executive director Tom Virgets defended the bans.

“Now it is up to the National Federation­s to make the final decision, but the executive committee needed to act now, especially as this situation has threatened to influence the upcoming election for AIBA leadership positions,” he said.

“The executive committee simply felt that enough was enough in terms of misinforma­tion and deceit in a time where everybody in AIBA should be working together for the best of boxing.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia