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Paolo Barelli’s Response to CAS Ruling on FINA Ethics

Yesterday, SwimSwam reported that Italian Swimming President and the President of LEN, Paolo Barelli, lost his case against FINA wherein he alleged that several members of the FINA Bureau were complicit in conflict-of-interest violations stemming from their involvements in other non-swimming entities that either work with FINA or have other more directly-political affiliations.

Following Barelli’s harsh words for bureau members including Dale Neuburger (USA), Husain Al-Musallam (Kuwait), Sam Ramsamy (South Africa), and FINA President Julio Maglione (Uruguay), Neuburger, who is also the President of UANA–Union Americana de Natacion–issued a statement on behalf of UANA endorsing Maglione for a third-consecutive term as FINA President, despite Maglione having aged-out of the position in 2015 when he turned 80-years-old.

Earlier this week SwimSwam published Barelli’s manifesto for the future of FINA, should he be elected as FINA President at the Congress on July 22nd in Budapest; Barelli also issued a statement detailing what he considers conflicts-of-interest perpetrated by Neuburger and Al-Musallam.  Al-Musallam, who was seemingly implicated in an investigation into FIFA corruption by the U.S. Department of Justice, is from Kuwait, a delegation that is suspended by both FINA and the IOC.  Neuburger, on the other hand, holds a position as FINA Vice President while also working at TSE Consulting, a firm which has worked with FINA, the Royal Dutch Swimming Federation, and other delegations.  Barelli also claims that Neuburger, through TSE’s orchestration of Erik Van Heijningen‘s campaign for LEN President in 2016, attempted to influence the outcome of the election, which Barelli won handily.

Below is Barelli’s most recent statement and reaction to the CAS ruling:

“I have received the decision from the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) relating to its determination of the question of my standing (capacity) to bring appeals to the CAS concerning decisions taken by the FINA Ethics Panel and FINA Executive bodies. The decisions I was appealing to the CAS concerned unsatisfactory determinations of complaints, against senior officials within FINA, which included allegations of serious breaches of the FINA Code of Ethics.

Unfortunately, the CAS was unable to find grounds within the FINA constitutional framework to allow me to pursue my appeals further to the merits assessment stage. This is disappointing, and concerning, as it suggests that no one can challenge a decision taken by FINA to dismiss (or even refuse to consider) a complaint based on breaches of the FINA Code of Ethics.

After failing with its attempts to stifle my appeals, with arguments alleging that the CAS did not have jurisdiction to hear the appeals, FINA continued with its quest to stop the appeals at the preliminary procedural stages. FINA has now been successful in stopping the appeals, through its arguments relating to my lack of technical and legal standing to bring the appeals, and the decisions which I challenged will now not be subject to an independent merits assessment.

As set out in my manifesto (which was released on 27 June 2017) one of the fundamental Seven Drivers for change which I propose is that I will strive for increased good governance and enhanced transparency within FINA, particularly at the senior administrative levels. Given the nature of the allegations made in the complaints, concerning the conduct of Mr Husain Al Musallam and Mr Dale Neuburger, I am not prepared to allow FINA to suppress those complaints and avoid undertaking a fair, transparent, impartial and procedurally correct assessment of those complaints. This was (and remains) the key motivation behind my appeals to the CAS.

Within its written decision, the CAS comments that the motives behind the appeals are “noble causes” but that such virtuous motivations do not, on their own, provide a technical and legal standing to bring the appeals.

It is unfortunate and disappointing that FINA has sought to stifle my appeals (as it did with the complaints concerning Mr Al Musallam and Mr Neuburger) based on procedural technicalities, rather than allow an independent arbitral panel to examine decisions of a world governing body which include allegations of breaches of ethics principles by its own senior officials. The obvious lack of accountability and transparency at the senior levels of FINA, exacerbated by constitutional uncertainty, are concerning aspects of the current FINA constitutional framework. I will not tolerate this unsatisfactory position and will not allow our sport to succumb to the reputational harm which other sports have suffered.

I am considering whether to appeal the CAS’ decision to the Swiss Federal Tribunal. FINA cannot be allowed to be both the ‘judge’ and the ‘jury’ in circumstances where there are serious complaints raised concerning breaches of the FINA Code of Ethics, particularly when the allegations relate to its own senior officials.”

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Swimmer?
7 years ago

FINA has either ruined swimming by keeping up the super suit times as legal world records and drastically shortened the length on men’s suits, or made it better because we freak out anytime a new world record is broken for the men.

urahrah
7 years ago

FINA is corrupt. In other news, water is wet.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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