Bach wants alternative organisers for boxing at Tokyo Olympics
SYDNEY: Olympic chief Thomas Bach believes an alternative organisation could run the boxing competition at next year’s Tokyo Olympics if recognition is withdrawn from the sport’s amateur governing body AIBA.
The participation of boxers at next year’s Summer Games was cast into doubt last November after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) launched an inquiry into financial and governance issues at AIBA, which has been in turmoil for years.
“We want to have boxing as an Olympic sport and we want to have a boxing competition at the Tokyo Olympics in 2020,” IOC president Bach told the Australian Olympic Committee annual general meeting yesterday.
“The question we are confronted with is, who will organise it? Will it be AIBA or will we have to find a different way?
“This depends on the results of an ongoing inquiry we have into AIBA which is looking at governance, finance, judging and refereeing – it is very, very serious.”
Bach expected the IOC inquiry to make their recommendations at an executive board meeting in Lausanne on May 22.
Boxing Australia director Johan Linde, who quizzed Bach on the issue, told Reuters he thought it would be extremely difficult to organise the competition, especially qualification, in the 14 months before the Tokyo Games open.
Bach, though, was sanguine about the prospect.
“We want to do this because boxing is important Olympic sport, it is a universal sport, so we want to have boxing on the programme,” he said.
“If the cases arises we would have to make an effort to have it and to have the qualification process.
“Organising a sports event is not rocket science so I guess we will be able to manage it.”