(SEPT 12) Dr Ching-Kuo Wu,
President of the International Boxing Association (AIBA),
announced this week that he will run in the AIBA Presidency
election once again for the upcoming new term. If successful he
would reign over the sport for a third – and final – four year
term.
Photo: Dr Ching-Kuo Wu/Courtesy
AIBA.org
In a communique to all AIBA
National Member Federations, Dr Wu said: “I am greatly proud of
what was achieved in the last 4 years together with you. As a
true team, we progressed together on all projects and
accomplished all objectives which were set at the 2010 AIBA
Congress. These achievements would indeed not have been possible
without your faithful trust and love for our sport.”
Commencing October, the Association will launch the AIBA Pro
Boxing (APB) competition ‘marking the commencement of another
historical phase for the organization and sport. APB is poised
to elevate the status of boxing and therefore benefit boxers and
aspiring young pugilists’.
Within the AIBA President’s vision, the launch of the APB
Competition is only a start to AIBA’s mission to “govern all
levels of boxing worldwide.”
“Therefore, I have decided to run again for the AIBA Presidency
to serve another 4 years and to continue enhancing all the AIBA
programs together with you for more great achievements in all
areas” – summarized Dr Ching-Kuo Wu in his letter.
The upcoming AIBA elections will take place during the AIBA
Congress on November 14, 2014 in Jeju Island, South Korea during
the AIBA Women’s Elite World Championships.
So what one wonders does Dr Wu plan to do to move closer towards
‘equality for women’ which has been his aim since the
introduction of three weights at the XXXth Olympiad in London
(2012)?
As WBAN has indicated ever since London and in our petition to
International Olympic Committee President Dr Thomas Bach and to
Dr Wu, it is far from ideal that at Rio 2016 there are still
only the original three weights for women (under 51kg,under 60kg
and under 75kg) meaning that boxers who fall between these
weights face significant health risks either gaining or losing
weight and in some instances taking on rivals who are much
heavier.
In an ‘exclusive interview’ with the prestigious ‘Inside the
Games’ (www.insidethegames.biz) 67 years old, Dr Wu indeed
indicated that among his main aims for a fourth term is
‘increasing the number of events for female boxers on the
Olympic programme’.
According to ‘InsideTheGames’,Wu,who is also a Vice-President
and a member of the IOC's ruling Executive Board, admits this
will not be an easy process, ‘both because of the need to avoid
sacrificing any male events and because of the IOC's reluctance
to add new events within existing sports’.
‘Instead of removing any male categories, he hopes to reduce the
number of boxers in each weight category in order to ensure a
greater number of divisions."We need to study and, hopefully in
the near future, insert one or two more events so the majority
of female boxers are able to compete in the Olympics," he told
insidethegames.
Wu confided: "This will not be easy, because we need to consider
the Olympic programme overall.
"We need to think very carefully about how to comfortably
include men and women in the Olympics.
"The tradition and history of male boxing has existed for a long
time, and once we reduce categories it would create
difficulties.
"So we are looking at whether we can absorb new events within
the existing quota, by keeping a total number of 286 boxers
across male and female events, but make some internal
adjustments."
Speaking soon after the conclusion of the Youth Olympic Games
(Nanjing 2014) , Wu also believes that new events could help
increase the interest in boxing – and other sports
"With the Youth Olympics, every International Federation is now
thinking about creating something, of the same nature and the
same sport, but of a different format," he went on.
"So it can involve more young people and give them experience
about the sport.
"I have issued this concept to our technical rule commission to
study and discuss with the IOC this concept, for the Youth
Olympics only, this is so important for the future; we need to
create something not exactly the same." There were also but the
same three weights in Nanjing, the first time that women had
taken part in Youth Olympics boxing.
It is believed that it is ‘extremely unlikely’ that anyone will
challenge Dr Wu in the forthcoming elections, but ‘watch this
space’.