(APR 3) COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. – On March 27, 2024, IOC President Thomas Bach addressed
representatives of the 17 National Olympic Committees (NOC) from
across the Oceania region at the ONOC Annual General Assembly in
Fiji. During his presentation, President Bach highlighted the
need for global sport leaders to not only apply good governance
at the continental or NOC level, but at the National Federation
(NF) level as well. He identified the requirement of NOC and
continental leaders to monitor the governance of National
Federations and noted that governance failures of National
Federations will inevitably impact NOCs and continental
associations.
“We are always judged by our weakest links. Nobody is…paying
attention if everything is going well, but if something is going
wrong in one of our member organizations, that affects us all
and the general public does not make a difference between a
National Member Federation…an organizing committee of any sport
event, an NOC, or a continental association or other
International Federations or the IOC...”
President Bach proceeded to identify the sport of Olympic-style
boxing and the International Boxing Association (IBA) as a
concrete example of this. He mentioned the “…long, long list of
failures over so many years in their governance…” when referring
to the IOC’s withdrawing of IBA’s Olympic recognition in June
2023, and stated that the status of Olympic-style boxing in Los
Angeles for 2028 and Brisbane for 2032 are still at risk. While
IOC leadership has maintained the stance that they want boxing
to be included in the Olympic Program due to its global nature
and impact on underprivileged people across all nations,
President Bach reiterated the IOC’s stated position that
boxing’s continued inclusion on the Olympic Program requires an
International Federation (IF) rooted in strong governance.
“To be very blunt, every National Boxing Federation and every
NOC who wants to see their boxers in the Olympic tournament…will
not be able to do so with this International Federation of which
we have withdrawn the recognition [IBA]. If we do not have, in
the near future, a reliable and representative International
Federation at our side, then it will not be possible to have
boxing on the program in LA.”
USA Boxing was the first National Federation to leave IBA in
April of 2023 after its 77-year relationship as a charter
member, and was the first to submit a completed application for
membership to World Boxing. USA Boxing membership and the
mission of World Boxing have been supported by the United States
Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) every step of the way
as the Olympic boxing crisis persisted. As a Founding Member of
World Boxing, USA Boxing worked to ensure that the robust
statutes were rooted in strong governance principles. Our
support for World Boxing’s mission is not solely driven by the
threat of boxing’s exclusion from the Olympic Program, but
primarily by the unwavering belief that our boxers deserve an
International Federation that operates according to strong
governance, financial transparency, and fairness in the field of
play. We are committed to working with World Boxing leaders to
ensure that the organization upholds these principles and
recognizes that being part of the Olympic Movement is a
privilege rather than a right.
President Bach and IOC leadership cannot be any clearer—IBA’s
failures in governance are not isolated to the boxing community.
These failures impact sports representatives throughout the
world, including but not limited to leaders of NOCs, other NFs
and IFs, brand representatives, and the IOC itself. Continued
support for an organization possessing such a track record of
governance failures is inexcusable and fails our athletes.
We call on leaders of not just boxing National Federation
leaders, but leaders of NOCs and other International Federations
to stand up for our athletes by supporting boxing’s new
International Federation and working together to ensure
adherence to best-in-class governance principles.
Always in the fight…never quit.
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