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New IOC President to be chosen

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP):

With three major votes on the agenda, Olympic leaders begin week long meetings today that will bring a close to Jacques Rogge’s 12-year reign as International Olympic Committee (IOC) president.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP):

With three major votes on the agenda, Olympic leaders begin week long meetings today that will bring a close to Jacques Rogge’s 12-year reign as International Olympic Committee (IOC) president.

 

The IOC convenes in Buenos Aires to choose a host city for the 2020 Games, elect Rogge’s successor, and add a sport to the 2020 lineup.

First up, Rogge chairs his policy-making executive board for the last time, a two-day meeting to review a range of Olympic issues.

The full IOC then convenes starting Friday, for its 125th session, a landmark meeting that will set the Olympic movement’s direction for the next decade.

On Saturday, the 100 or so IOC members will vote by secret ballot on the 2020 host, a three-way contest between Tokyo, Madrid and Istanbul. A day later, the members will choose between wrestling, squash and baseball-softball for a spot in the 2020 Games. And next week Tuesday, the IOC will elect a new president from among six contenders.

After a two-year global campaign, Tokyo is seen as a slight favourite going into the final days of the 2020 race, pushing their case as a “safe pair of hands” at a time of global uncertainty.

With the leak of radioactive water from the tsunami-crippled Fukushima nuclear plant raising concerns, Tokyo bid leader, Tsunekazu Takeda, has written to all IOC members seeking to reassure them that the city and its Olympic plans are “completely unaffected”.

Madrid has picked up momentum in recent months, despite Spain’s recession and 27-per cent unemployment rate. Madrid contends that its bid makes the most economic sense because most of the venues are already built and only $1.9 billion will be spent on construction.

Istanbul is urging the IOC to make a “historic” choice by taking the Games to a new region and a city that links Europe and Asia.

Wrestling, meanwhile, looks in strong position to win back its place for 2020 after being surprisingly dropped from the list of core sports in February by the IOC executive board.

Stung by the wake-up call, wrestling body FILA responded rapidly by changing leadership, giving women and athletes a bigger role in decision-making and adopting rule changes to make the sport more fan-friendly.

Men’s baseball and women’s softball, which have been out of the Olympics since the 2008 Beijing Games, have merged into a single federation to improve their chances for reinstatement. Squash is back for a third try at making it into the Olympics.

IOC Vice-president Thomas Bach, of Germany, has been considered the longtime front-runner to succeed Rogge, the Belgian surgeon who served one eight-year term and was re-elected in 2009 to a second and final four-year mandate.

Richard Carrion, a Puerto Rican banking executive who heads the IOC’s finance commission, and Vice-president Ng Ser Miang, of Singapore, shape up as the other main contenders.

Also on the ballot are executive board members Sergey Bubka of Ukraine and C.K. Wu of Taiwan and former board member Denis Oswald, of Switzerland.

Photo: Jacques Rogge (guardian.co.uk)

 

 

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