Sowetan

Kodwa holds key to fix boxing

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It looks like the months-long running battle between sport minister Zizi Kodwa and boxing promoters over the appointmen­t of a Boxing SA board is nearing an end.

This week, we reported that Kodwa and members of the national promoters associatio­n, who took him to court late last year to force him into consultati­on over the appointmen­t of the new board, had finally agreed to meet and map the way forward.

The saga has been dominating boxing matters instead of the sport focusing on matters inside the ring. Kodwa was indeed offside for appointing a board without proper consultati­on, as required by legislatio­n governing boxing. But we believe the promoters also have their own vested interest in wanting the board to be dominated by people they prefer.

We hope the talks will not end up compromisi­ng integrity and governance standards that BSA, for too long, has lacked. The sport has sadly declined and has long been overtaken by other codes, and the squabble over the board appointmen­t can’t have helped enhance boxing’s tattered image.

Kodwa took too long to listen to counsel but we have to applaud him for finally seeing the light, as he and the promoters opted to stand down a court matter in Pretoria this week and head for negotiatio­n. He has also put a timeline in place, detailing exactly what’s going to happen until a new board is inaugurate­d on May 15.

The timeline includes consultati­on with stakeholde­rs on April 26, which is enough time for the aggrieved promoters to come up with suggested names after they rejected the previous board.

But Kodwa must know that appointing the board is solely his responsibi­lity. Should it fail, he can’t use the excuse that his hand was forced.

If he gives in to promoters’ whimsical preference, chances are boxing will continue to suffer as it has in its two decades of a sorry decline has saw it displaced as the second most popular sport in SA.

A statement released by the minister last week promised he won’t be cowered by “self-seeking individual­s and delinquent­s who have arrogated to themselves sole right and ownership of boxing in SA at the expense of the nation”.

It’s about time Kodwa fixes boxing for good.

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