The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Sunday (August 8) gave itself more power to remove sports from the Olympic program. The decision voted in by IOC members comes during prolonged issues with the leadership of weightlifting and boxing and it can see India’s star weightlifter Mirabai Chanu, who won silver at 2020 Tokyo Olympics, miss out on the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
The IOC can now remove a sport if its governing body does not comply with a decision made by the Olympic body’s executive board or if it “acts in a manner likely to tarnish the reputation of the Olympic movement.”
Notably, weightlifting could lose its place at the 2024 Paris Olympics because of long-term doping problems and governance issues. The International Weightlifting Federation was led for two decades until last year by longtime IOC member Tamas Ajan.
If IOC decides to spell the end of weightlifting’s long association with the Olympic Games then Chanu & her fellow weightlifters won’t be able to feature at Paris 2024 Olympics.
It is worth mentioning that Boxing at the Tokyo Games was taken out of the International Boxing Association’s control in 2019 after doubts about the integrity of Olympic bouts and IOC concerns about its presidential elections.
Weightlifting in Tokyo 2020 marked by firsts, but recent scandals cloud outlook
Weightlifting was marked by a series of breakthroughs at the Tokyo Olympics — the first openly transgender athlete to compete at any Games and the Philippine’s first gold ever – but recent doping scandals are clouding its outlook ahead of Paris 2024.
New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard made history on Monday by becoming the first openly transgender athlete to compete at an Olympic Games in a different gender category to that assigned at birth, while Philippines’ Hidilyn Diaz became her country’s first-ever Olympic gold medallist.
China scooped up the most medals in the absence of powerful lifters from North Korea.
But the sport has recently been mired by doping scandals and an International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) official last month cast doubt on its future at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach said on Friday the sport’s governing body had to improve governance.
“I am not aware at this moment of any case in competition, or of any disqualification because of doping. This applies to weightlifting,” said Bach, referring to the Tokyo Olympics.
“But with regard to weightlifting, there’s more than just doping. With regard to good governance, I think we still need to see a culture change in this international federation.”
In June, Hungarian Tamas Ajan, the former head of IWF, as well as current IWF vice-president Nicu Vlad, were charged with “complicity and tampering” in regard to doping offenses after a probe by the International Testing Agency (ITA).
The head of the European confederation, Turk Hassan Akkus, was charged with “tampering.”
Ajan stood down after 20 years as IWF president last year, initially to allow an investigation to be conducted by law professor Richard McLaren, which exposed the cover-up of doping offences, rigged elections and the disappearance of millions of dollars. Ajan denied any wrongdoing.
Romania, whose weightlifting governing body is led by Vlad, as well as Thailand and Malaysia, were barred from the Tokyo Olympics due to unsolved doping cases among lifters.
Weightlifting is included in the programme for the Paris Games but that decision may be overturned depending on a number of factors like governance and doping, IWF official Sam Coffa told Reuters in July.The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Sunday (August 8) gave itself more power to remove sports from the Olympic program. The decision voted in by IOC members comes during prolonged issues with the leadership of weightlifting and boxing and it can see India’s star weightlifter Mirabai Chanu, who won silver at 2020 Tokyo Olympics, miss out on the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
The IOC can now remove a sport if its governing body does not comply with a decision made by the Olympic body’s executive board or if it “acts in a manner likely to tarnish the reputation of the Olympic movement.”
Notably, weightlifting could lose its place at the 2024 Paris Olympics because of long-term doping problems and governance issues. The International Weightlifting Federation was led for two decades until last year by longtime IOC member Tamas Ajan.
If IOC decides to spell the end of weightlifting’s long association with the Olympic Games then Chanu & her fellow weightlifters won’t be able to feature at Paris 2024 Olympics.
It is worth mentioning that Boxing at the Tokyo Games was taken out of the International Boxing Association’s control in 2019 after doubts about the integrity of Olympic bouts and IOC concerns about its presidential elections.
Weightlifting in Tokyo 2020 marked by firsts, but recent scandals cloud outlook
Weightlifting was marked by a series of breakthroughs at the Tokyo Olympics — the first openly transgender athlete to compete at any Games and the Philippine’s first gold ever – but recent doping scandals are clouding its outlook ahead of Paris 2024.
New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard made history on Monday by becoming the first openly transgender athlete to compete at an Olympic Games in a different gender category to that assigned at birth, while Philippines’ Hidilyn Diaz became her country’s first ever Olympic gold medallist.
China scooped up the most medals in the absence of powerful lifters from North Korea.
But the sport has recently been mired by doping scandals and an International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) official last month cast doubt on its future at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach said on Friday the sport’s governing body had to improve governance.
“I am not aware at this moment of any case in competition, or of any disqualification because of doping. This applies to weightlifting,” said Bach, referring to the Tokyo Olympics.
“But with regard to weightlifting there’s more than just doping. With regard of good governance I think we still need to see a culture change in this international federation.”
In June, Hungarian Tamas Ajan, the former head of IWF, as well as current IWF vice-president Nicu Vlad, were charged with “complicity and tampering” in regard to doping offences after a probe by the International Testing Agency (ITA).
The head of the European confederation, Turk Hassan Akkus, was charged with “tampering.”
Ajan stood down after 20 years as IWF president last year, initially to allow an investigation to be conducted by law professor Richard McLaren, which exposed the cover-up of doping offences, rigged elections and the disappearance of millions of dollars. Ajan denied any wrongdoing.
Romania, whose weightlifting governing body is led by Vlad, as well as Thailand and Malaysia, were barred from the Tokyo Olympics due to unsolved doping cases among lifters.
Weightlifting is included in the programme for the Paris Games but that decision may be overturned depending on a number of factors like governance and doping, IWF official Sam Coffa told Reuters in July.