LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Zimbabwe's sports minister, Kirsty Coventry hopes her election as the first female and African president of the International Olympic Committee - beating six male candidates including Britain's Lord Coe - sends a "powerful signal".
Zimbabwe's sports minister, Kirsty Coventry |
The 41-year-old
former swimmer, who won two Olympic gold medals, secured a majority of
49 of the 97 available votes in the first round of Thursday's election, while
World Athletics boss Coe won just eight.
Coventry will replace Thomas Bach - who has led the IOC since 2013 - on 23 June
and be the youngest president in the organisation's 130-year history.
Her first Olympics will be the
Milan-Cortina Winter Games in February 2026.
"It's a really powerful
signal. It's a signal that we're truly global and that we have evolved into an
organisation that is truly open to diversity and we're going to continue
walking that road in the next eight years," Coventry said.
Runner-up Juan Antonio
Samaranch Jr won 28 votes while France's David Lappartient and Japan's Morinari
Watanabe earned four votes each. Prince Feisal al Hussein of Jordan and
Sweden's Johan Eliasch both took two.
Coventry, who already sits on
the IOC executive board and was said to be Bach's preferred candidate, is the
10th person to hold the highest office in sport and will be in post for at
least the next eight years.
Coventry has won seven of
Zimbabwe's eight Olympic medals - including gold in the 200m backstroke at both
the 2004 and 2008 Games.
"The young girl who first
started swimming in Zimbabwe all those years ago could never have dreamed of
this moment," said Coventry.
"I am particularly proud
to be the first female IOC president, and also the first from Africa.
"I hope that this vote
will be an inspiration to many people. Glass ceilings have been shattered
today, and I am fully aware of my responsibilities as a role model."
Coventry described her
election as an "extraordinary moment" during her acceptance speech,
and promised to make IOC members proud of their choice.
During her election campaign
Coventry pledged to modernise, promote sustainability, embrace technology and
empower athletes.
She placed particular emphasis
on protecting female sport, backing a blanket ban of transgender women from
competing in female Olympic sport.
No comments:
Post a Comment