IOC advised to empower ethics panel, control $500M panel
LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The International Olympic Committee was advised on Monday to give its ethics panel more power to investigate suspected wrongdoing by sports officials.
Financial risks linked to the Olympic Solidarity Commission, which has $500 million to give Olympic bodies ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Games, were also identified by Lausanne-based management consultants hired by the IOC.
The Solidarity panel chairman, Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah of Kuwait, is currently implicated in a FIFA bribery case in the United States. He resigned from FIFA in April.
Seven “dilemmas” in the coming years and 33 recommendations to improve how the IOC is run were suggested by the International Institute for Management Development.


