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IOC recommends suspending boxing federation from Tokyo 2020

Lausanne - The International Olympic Committee recommended Wednesday that amateur boxing's governing body be stripped of its right to organise the event at Tokyo 2020, but said the sport should still feature at the Games.

The guidance from the IOC's executive board -- almost certain to be rubber-stamped by the full IOC membership next month -- followed a months-long investigation into alleged serious mismanagement at the crisis-riddled International Boxing Association (AIBA).

The probe "speaks for itself," IOC president Thomas Bach told reporters in Lausanne. 

He said the evidence details "extremely serious issues" within AIBA ranging from "deficiencies" in governance, to lack of due diligence and conflicts of interest. 

In ousting AIBA from the Tokyo Games but creating a new path for boxers to compete, the IOC was seeking to ensure that athletes "can live their dream and participate in the Olympic Games" while making sure AIBA faced "the necessary consequences," Bach said in a statement.

The IOC probe was led by audit firm Deloitte, and centred on subjects ranging from finances, governance and ethics to anti-doping, refereeing and judging.

The probe determined that AIBA has made "a lack of satisfactory progress," in resolving its issues, the IOC said.   

Formed in 1946, AIBA has overseen decades of signature Olympic moments, notably the 1960 gold medal win in Rome by Muhammad Ali, then known as Cassius Clay.

But its reputation has been tarnished in recent years as it careened from crisis to crisis. 

Relations between AIBA and the IOC took a sharp downward turn following the 2016 Rio Games, when 36 officials and referees were suspended amid allegations of bout fixing.

An internal investigation by AIBA raised deeper questions about the judging in Rio, with particular suspicion falling on a French official.

Then in 2017, AIBA executives forced out the body's president C.K. Wu, amid claims of multi-million dollar accounting fraud.

Wu, a Taiwanese national, denied wrongdoing and remains a member of the IOC, an indication that he retains the support of senior Olympic officials. 

Wu was ultimately replaced by the controversial Uzbek businessman Gafur Rakhimov, who the US Treasury Department has linked to "transnational criminal organisations".

Rakhimov, who stepped aside in March, vehemently rejects such charges and insists the allegations against him are "politically motivated lies".

Bach said that because Rakhimov has been sanctioned by the US Treasury Department, dealing with AIBA posed a "high risk... (for) anybody who is subject to US jurisprudence."

Complications surrounding Rakhimov's designation by the US government "played a major role in the deliberations of the inquiry commission," Bach said. 

Rakhimov was replaced as interim president by Moroccan doctor Mohamed Moustahsane -- the fourth head of AIBA in 18 months. 

Before the announcement, AIBA's leadership had insisted that the organisation had met all the requirements stipulated by the IOC.

The governing body's chief executive Tom Virgets told AFP earlier this month that the organisation had "done everything that has been asked by the IOC".

"Every single document asked, we produced, every single requirement we have met," he said.

Addressing boxers hoping to compete in 2020, Bach vowed that "there will be an Olympic tournament in Tokyo."

The IOC has created a special taskforce led by Morinari Watanabe of the Japanese Olympic Committee to organise both the qualifiers and the Tokyo competition. 

Details have yet to be hammered out, but the IOC said qualifications will take place between January and May 2020.

Boxers, Bach said, should rest assured that there will be a "fair competition in which all the athletes have equal and fair chances."

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