IOC

FASANOC Welcomes OS Increase

FASANOC has welcomed the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) increase of Olympic Solidarity funds by 16 per cent overall

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November 17, 2020

25/11/20

The Fiji Association of Sports and National Olympic Committee (FASANOC) has welcomed the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) increase of Olympic Solidarity funds by 16 per cent overall and by 25 per cent for direct athlete support programmes.

The aim of Olympic Solidarity is to organise assistance to all the National Olympic Committees (NOCs), particularly those with the greatest needs, through multi-faceted programmes prioritising athlete development, training of coaches and sports administrators, and promoting the Olympic Values.

FASANOC's Chief Executive Officer, Lorraine Mar said “We welcome this news as  Fiji athletes and National Federations benefit directly from Olympic Solidarity funding.”

Over the past quadrennial 2017-2020  support has been provided from the following programs:

-   7 Olympic  Scholarships for Athletes “Tokyo 2020” recipients,

- Team Support Grant awarded to the Fijiana Women’s Rugby Sevens Team

-  Coaching Courses held locally run by International Federation qualified experts: Archery, Athletics, Basketball, Rugby 7s, Surfing, Table Tennis, Tennis, Volleyball, Weightlifting

- Coaching Scholarships: Cycling (Leena Pratt), Tennis (William O’Connell), ICECP (Weightlifting and FASANOC);  MEMOS Makelesi Bulikiobo, FASANOC,

- Sports Medicine Courses;  Upskilling of Doctors, physios and team entourages, Strength & Conditioning, Anti Doping& Safeguarding programs

- Athletes Commission: Training and advocacy of athletes from various National Federations

-  Sport for Social Development: Promotion of Olympic Values within communities and sporting events coordinated by Voices of the Athletes; Women in Sport advocacy programs including media training workshops

-  Sports Education:  Certification programs for Coaches, Technical Personnel, Sport Managers and Officials

-  Equipment: Purchase of sports equipment to assist courses and athletes preparation

-  Team Preparation & Participation:  Support to teams preparing and participating at the 2017 Pacific Mini Games, 2018 Commonwealth Games, 2018 Youth Olympic Games, 2019 Pacific Games and the upcoming 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games

The IOC Executive Board (EB)has agreed to increase the budget of Olympic Solidarity for the period 2021 to 2024 by 16 per cent. The budget for 2021-2024 will now total USD 590 million across the five continents. With this decision, the IOC will further strengthen its support to athletes, National Olympic Committees (NOCs) and Continental Associations of NOCs.

“One important lesson that I hope we have all learnt from the current Corona crisis is that we need more solidarity. We need more solidarity within societies, but also among societies. Solidarity is one of the key Olympic values which the Olympic community is actively promoting. Today’s decision to increase the budget of our Olympic Solidarity programme for the next four-year cycle by 16 per cent to USD 590 million is a very strong demonstration in times of a worldwide crisis,” IOC President Thomas Bach said.

“At 25 per cent, the increase in the funding of direct athlete support programmes is even higher than the overall increase. Additionally, the athletes as members of the Olympic teams will benefit from the 25 per cent increase for NOCs. The IOC continues to help all NOCs, particularly those with the greatest needs and the IOC Refugee Olympic Team, through a wide range of programmes prioritising athletes’ development, and the training and education of their entourage.”

Hockey participants @ a recent VOA Outreach made possible with the support of FASANOC, ONOC and Olympic Solidarity Funding

Presented by EB Member, Chair of the Olympic Solidarity Commission and IOC Member in Fiji, Dr Robin Mitchell, the 2021–2024 Olympic Solidarity plan is fit for purpose in the post-coronavirus world, meaning that all funding and programmes go as a priority to Olympic Solidarity’s direct beneficiaries: the athletes and the NOCs.

Olympic Solidarity’s athletes’ programmes touch on every aspect of an athlete’s lifecycle, from grassroots level to elite and to post-career, and will remain at the heart of Olympic Solidarity’s sports development priorities.

It was also pointed out during the meeting that the decentralisation of a portion of the funds to the Continental Associations should be reinforced in order to develop sustained programmes responding to continental specificities. To that end, the budget allocated to each NOC for its national activities has been increased to the equivalent of USD 500,000 per NOC per Olympiad, and continent-specific programme budgets have been increased by 24 per cent.   In Oceania’s case, the Oceania National Olympic Committees (ONOC), based in Suva, manages this grant.

Swimming participants @ a recent VOA Outreach made possible through the support of FASANOC, ONOC and Olympic Solidarity Funding

The priorities of Olympic Solidarity for 2021-2024 are as follows:

- Empower NOCs to keep athletes at the heart of the Olympic Movement through increased support to athletes for development at all levels, facilitating engagement through forums and exchanges, strengthening opportunities for the athletes’ entourage to play effective support roles, and ensuring that the provisions of the Athletes’ Rights and Responsibilities Declaration can be implemented by the NOCs.

- Ensure good governance, financial control and compliance by strengthening capacity-building programmes for NOCs.

- Strengthen the Olympic Movement’s solidarity funding model by prioritising the principal Olympic Solidarity mission of focusing on NOCs with the greatest needs and ensuring effective communication of all streams of Olympic Solidarity funding by the NOCs.

- Align with the IOC’s strategy for the post-coronavirus world with the enhancement of dedicated Olympic Solidarity programmes to facilitate the NOCs’ participation in future Olympic and Youth Olympic Games, and by providing online education, advocacy and training opportunities for NOCs.

- Enable NOCs to contribute to the promotion of the Olympic values by aligning Olympic Solidarity programmes with the IOC’s strategy, lending support to refugee athletes and facilitating the participation of the IOC Refugee Olympic Team at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.

- Provide individualised services to NOCs by means of targeted and direct support to 206 unique organisations through guaranteeing the minimum funding available for each NOC and reinforcing decentralised Continental Programmes responding to continental specificities.

- And finally, to introduce a robust monitoring, evaluation and learning framework for all Olympic Solidarity programmes.

Hockey participants @ a recent VOA Outreach possible through the support of FASANOC, ONOC and Olympic Solidarity Funding

2017–2020 Olympic Solidarity highlights

In the framework of the 2017-2020 quadrennial plan, over 25,000 athletes were supported through Olympic Solidarity, including 3,000 summer and winter sports athletes who were awarded Olympic scholarships for their preparation for the upcoming Games. As a reference, at the Olympic Games Rio 2016, 101 medals were awarded to athletes who were Olympic scholarship-holders (33 gold, 26 silver and 42 bronze).

IOC distributed USD 5 billion during the past Olympiad for the development of sport

The IOC distributes 90 per cent of all its revenues for the benefit of the athletes and the development of sport and Paralympic sport around the globe. With this solidarity funding model, the equivalent of USD 5 billion was distributed during the past Olympiad, or 3.4 million USD per day. This financial support benefits not just a few countries or a few sports. It benefits all the athletes from all 206 NOCs, from the IOC Refugee Olympic Team and from all Olympic sports, whether popular or less popular, thereby ensuring true universality and diversity of the Olympic Games and within the Olympic community. The Olympic Solidarity programme is one of those through which the IOC’s revenue is distributed.

FASANOC acknowledges the on going support of the IOC through its Olympic Solidarity funding programmes, as well as the assistance received regionally through ONOC.   Olympic sports will have the opportunity to apply for Olympic Solidarity funded programmes once detailed information is received.

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