IOA dissolves ad-hoc committee for wrestling, WFI to take charge
The IOA said that the decision was also guided by the successful conduct of the selection trials for next month's Olympic qualifying tournament for which the panel collaborated with the Wrestling Federation of India
PTI
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Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) President Sanjay Singh and WFI Treasurer Satyapal Singh Deshwal
New Delhi, 18 March
The Indian Olympic Association on
Monday dissolved the ad-hoc committee for wrestling, saying "there is no
further need" for it to continue after revocation of the suspension on the
national federation, which now gets complete administrative control of the
sport.
The IOA said that the decision was
also guided by the successful conduct of the selection trials for next month's
Olympic qualifying tournament for which the panel collaborated with the
Wrestling Federation of India (WFI). The ad-hoc committee was formed in
December last year after the sports ministry suspended the WFI, which got a
shot in the arm when the suspension imposed on it by the global governing body
-- United World Wrestling -- was lifted in February.
"The decision to dissolve the
Adhoc Committee comes in light of the lifting of the ban on the Wrestling
Federation of India (WFI) by the United World Wrestling (UWW) and the
successful completion of Selection Trials by the Adhoc Committee appointed by
the IOA as per the directives of the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi," said
the IOA order issued on 10 March.
WFI chief Sanjay Singh thanked the
Indian Olympic Association for giving his elected panel control of the national
federation. "We thank IOA for giving us full-fledged control of the WFI.
We will give all facilities to the wresters. We will soon organise a national
camp and if the wrestlers want to train abroad we will facilitate that as well.
The focus is now on the Olympics. We are hoping that 5-6 wrestlers will
qualify," Singh told PTI.
The three-member committee, under
the chairmanship of Bhupender Singh Bajwa was constituted on 23 December after
the newly-elected WFI, led by Sanjay Singh, had allegedly flouted its own
rules. Earlier this month, the ad-hoc panel organised the trials to select the
teams for the Asian Championships and the Asian Olympic Qualifiers in
Kyrgyzstan to be held next month.
The protesting duo of Vinesh Phogat
and Bajrang Punia competed in the trials and the former made the cut for
Olympic qualifiers in the 50kg category. Following the successful completion of
the trials, the reins of the sport have now been formally handed over to WFI
despite the continuing suspension imposed by the sports ministry.
The IOA instructed WFI to appoint a
"Safeguarding Committee" to address concerns of sexual harassment and
other issues such as adherence to rules. "...as instructed by the UWW, it
is imperative that the WFI appoint a Safeguarding Committee / Officer at the
earliest to address the concerns of abuse and harassment and to ensure
adherence to all rules, regulations, and guidelines set forth by the UWW and
other relevant authorities," the IOA letter added.
"Furthermore, the WFI is also
directed to conduct the elections of the Athletes Commission in a time-bound
manner, in accordance with the established procedures and guidelines. "This
step is essential to promote athlete representation and participation in the
decision-making processes of the WFI."
The order also instructed the WFI
to "repay the loan" provided by the IOA to the ad-hoc panel for
managing wrestling affairs when the national body was under suspension. "The
day I won elections, you know that it was a crown of thorns for me. Despite
limitations, we tried everything, whether it was organising the Nationals (in
Pune), or providing officials and referees to the ad-hoc panel for the recent
trials after (Delhi High Court) court stopped us from organising trials (in New
Delhi). I am sure that it is the end of the struggle for us," added Sanjay
Singh.
A source close to the developments
said he was "surprised" by the IOA's move to dissolve the ad-hoc
panel. "The Sports Ministry had suspended the WFI in December last year
and it hasn't yet issued orders for revoking the suspension. Besides, the case
is sub-judice, so it's surprising why ad-hoc panel was dissolved by the
IOA," he said.
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