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Factional Strife Plaguing Korean Boxing

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  • Factional Strife Plaguing Korean Boxing

    FACTIONAL STRIFE PLAGUING KOREAN BOXING
    By Kang Seung-woo, [email protected]

    Korea Times
    07-06-2009 17:04

    The Korean Amateur Boxing Federation (KABF) has been suspended for a
    weigh-in violation for a boxer at the national qualifying tournament
    for the World Junior Championships and for sending an unqualified
    team doctor to the competition, held in Yerevan, Armenia, in May.

    As a result, all boxers and officials of the KABF have been banned
    indefinitely from participating in any International Boxing Association
    (AIBA)-sanctioned events.

    However, behind the scenes, the severe punishments are believed to
    be rooted in factional strife between former and current executives
    of the KABF.

    According to a letter to the KABF from its international counterpart
    in May, the boxing governing body received a petition that said the
    Korean federation had violated a rule by allowing an overweight boxer
    to pass the weigh-in twice and to compete at the event.

    However, the Korea Sports Council (KSC) has ruled after an
    investigation that the boxer did not fail to make weight and the
    chairman of the trial committee also said that there were no wrongdoing
    in the weigh-in.

    As for the team doctor, the KABF said that a different view between
    the two sides has led to the ban.

    "The team doctor that the AIBA refers to and the physical therapist
    whom we took to the championships are totally different. An opposing
    aspect on the job has triggered this problem," an official of the
    KABF told The Korea Times.

    The KABF later learned that a former executive member of the boxing
    organization had filed the petition to the AIBA.

    But the KABF claims that the AIBA reached a rash conclusion, based
    only on the allegation by the former KABF executives, with no probe.

    "The AIBA made a hasty decision. When a governing body suspends its
    affiliate, it has to investigate what has happened first and then
    decide on a penalty, rather than vice versa," a KSC official told
    The Korea Times.

    "When a punishment is handed down to an association, it is usually
    applied to its officials, not athletes.

    "It is exceptional and too excessive."

    KSC President Park Yong-sung requested a probe into the charges to
    AIBA head Wu Ching-kuo of Taiwan last month, and he has agreed to
    send investigators to Korea in early July.

    The former executives have also gone after new President Yoo Jae-joon,
    who took over in January, by submitting a petition related to the
    election of the new president of the KABF, and even filed a lawsuit
    against his selection in March, which was cleared due to lack of
    evidence.

    The KABF official believes that a former executive member, who is
    now working for the AIBA, has put pressure on the KABF head to pave
    an easy road for President Wu's re-election next year.

    In the AIBA presidential campaign in 2006, Yoo supported Anwar Chowdhry
    of Pakistan.

    The former executives reportedly even tried to bring a new figure to
    the KABF chief post.

    The suspension forced South Korean boxers to miss the Asian Boxing
    Championships in Zhuhai, China last month, and if the suspension
    continues, they will not be able to participate in the World
    Championships in Milan, scheduled for Sept. 1 to 12.

    The AIBA is also responsible for managing boxing programs such as
    the Asian and Olympic Games.
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