(MAY 21) The President of the
International Olympic Committee (IOC), Jacques Rogge has given the
most positive indication yet that women's boxing will be included in
the 2012 Olympics in London.
Rogge, a Belgium national, was in Dublin, Ireland yesterday for the
unveiling of a bust of former IOC President Lord Killanian.
He told today's Irish Times: “There is a proposal of the
International Boxing Federation on the table, but not yet finalised."
Rogge, a physician by profession, addmited that medical issues had
halted the IOC's decision to introduce the female version of the
noble art at the 2008 Games in Beijing.
“They made their first application in 2005. We examined the
situation, but at that time they did not have enough universality,
and they did not have enough countries.
"And also, from a medical point of view, there was a big
discrepancy, in the same weight category, between the skills and the
level of the women. You would have very sophisticated boxers against
very junior boxers, in the same weight category, which in boxing is
dangerous.
“So we said they’d have to wait a few years. Now we are four years
later. We’ve studied it again with the medical commission of the
IOC, and they have said no problem, from a medical point of view.
"And we are satisfied that there is a far better universality. So
conditions are totally different. The timing is right, because the
sport has evolved a lot, both in universality, and also the
homogeneity within each weight bracket.”
Ultimately, the decisions rests with the IOC executive board, rather
than the full IOC Congress: “That’s because it’s a discipline within
a sport, not a new sport. The full Congress votes on new sports, but
the executive votes on new disciplines within a sport. So once the
proposal is finalised, it will be decided by the executive board in
December.”