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Seedings for Azerbaijani fighters at world championships put AIBA in

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  • Seedings for Azerbaijani fighters at world championships put AIBA in

    Seedings for Azerbaijani fighters at world championships put AIBA in
    the spotlight
    The relationship between the Amateur International Boxing Association,
    the sport's world governing body, and Azerbaijan came into focus again
    after it emerged that five of the nine boxers representing the host
    nation at the World Championships in Baku have been given seeded
    positions that are not reflected by their world rankings.
    Allegations denied: Taiwan's Wu Ching-kuo, the AIBA president Photo:
    REUTERS By Gareth A Davies, Boxing Correspondent

    Daily Telegraph/UK
    11:52PM BST 26 Sep 2011

    A new ruling, which was introduced last month, was brought in by the
    AIBA to allow every home boxer in a championship to be seeded.

    The news comes in the wake of an investigation by Olympic boxing
    - officials into allegations, made on the BBC's Newsnight last week,
    that gold medal bouts at next summer's London Games could be rigged in
    a $9?million (£5.78? million) corruption operation.

    Newsnight claimed to reveal secret payments of at least $9?million
    from an Azerbaijani source to an AIBA subsidiary, World Series Boxing,
    and aired allegations that WSB's chief executive claimed the money was
    conditional on Azerbaijani fighters winning two gold medals at London
    2012. The world championships, which started yesterday, also act as a
    qualifying tournament for the Olympics.

    The seedings see the Azerbaijani super-heavyweight Magomedrasul
    Medzhidov ranked No?2, despite never having fought in a major
    tournament at that weight. He is not ranked in the top 50 in the world
    in the division. Of the eight other boxers, four are seeded at No?8 in
    their respective weight categories although that does not reflect
    their world ranking.

    A boxer who is seeded is likely to avoid another seed in the early
    rounds. Last night AIBA officials had not responded to a request for
    an explanation of the seeding system.

    In all weights bar the heaviest two, the eight quarter-finalists are
    guaranteed places in London. At heavyweight and super-heavyweight,
    where the Azerbaijanis are seeded three and two respectively, only
    semi-finalists will qualify for the Games.

    There were fears within the British and Irish camps that the Newsnight
    investigations, and reporting by the British media, could impact on
    the country's boxers in - - the tournament.

    In Azerbaijan there was fury over the allegations of bribes.
    Kamaladdin Heydarov, the emergency situations minister who also heads
    Azerbaijan's boxing federation, said the corruption allegations were
    lies. The AIBA president, Taiwan's Wu Ching-kuo, has also rejected the
    allegations as `totally untrue and ludicrous' but confirmed that the
    organisation would launch an investigation.

    Last night the governing body closed ranks over the allegations with
    executive committee members signing a declaration `to fight against
    any type of groundless and intentionally harmful accusations against
    AIBA'.

    Meanwhile, the father of the Bolton boxer Haroon Khan, who is Amir
    Khan's younger brother, has said the family will appeal against the
    decision not to allow him to represent Pakistan at the London
    Olympics.

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