Newly elected IOC president pauses India’s 2036 Olympic bid, process delayed

Updated: Jun 27th, 2025

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Newly elected IOC president pauses  India’s 2036 Olympic bid, process delayed
Newly elected IOC president Kirsty Coventry with former president Thomas Bach

A ‘pause and review’ approach for selecting the Olympic host from the newly elected International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Kirsty Coventry has put a temporary break to India’s dreams of hosting the 2036 event, as the new president steers away from her predecessor’s policy where India was a frontrunner, as per reports.

Notably, Coventry was just elected as the IOC president on Monday.

India’s delegation, supposed to arrive in Switzerland in October, will proceed as scheduled, suggested the reports. Coventry reportedly said that her talks with the delegation will help the IOC better understand the situation. She also clarified that there is no specific halt, but it was for the entire process.

Zimbabwe’s Coventry was officially welcomed as the president of IOC after Thomas Bach handed over the keys of the Olympic House to the former Olympic swimming champion in a handover ceremony held in Switzerland on Monday. 

Coventry was elected as the 10th president of the IOC and the first female president in IOC history, following voting at the 144th IOC Session in Costa Navarino, Greece, in March this year. “In this spirit of gratitude, confidence, and joy, I hand over the keys of Olympic House to Mrs Kirsty Coventry, the 10th President of the International Olympic Committee,” Bach said.

The president was elected by the IOC members by secret ballot for a term of eight years. Coventry succeeds the ninth IOC president, Bach, whose 12-year tenure officially ended on Monday.

Bach was also awarded the Olympic Order in Gold by IOC President-elect Coventry, recognising his outstanding contribution to world sport and faithfulness to the Olympic ideal.

“This is the Olympic family. It is one of my greatest honours that I get to do this today. President Bach, I have been watching over the many years you have had this honour. And I’m extremely honoured because, as a movement, we’ve chosen to give this recognition to you. As I said, for your passion, for your commitment, for your purpose. But I get to give you the Olympic Order in gold as my very first Olympic Order. And I’m very excited about that,” she said.

“Over the last few weeks, there have been an incredible number of memories that have been shared with all of you, with President Bach, and in most of those, I have been able to be a part of it. There has been a common theme of words that have come up. Passion, purpose, respect, values, and togetherness. And this is a legacy that will stay with all of us for an extremely long amount of time. You are not just a leader, but a friend to so many of us. Thank you for that commitment and the time that both you and Claudia have given to us as a movement,” she added.

“Mr President, Thomas Bach, in recognition of your outstanding merit in the cause of world sport, and your faithfulness to the Olympic ideal as illustrated by Pierre de Coubertin, Renovator of the Olympic Games, I have the honour to award you the Olympic Order in gold,” said Coventry.

Coventry qualified for the first of her five Olympic Games in Sydney in 2000. She competed in four events in Sydney, but she did not win a medal. Four years later in Athens, she made her breakthrough, winning three medals and becoming the first athlete from Zimbabwe to claim an individual gold, triumphing in the 200m backstroke.

She competed in two more Olympic Games in London and Rio de Janeiro before retiring from the sport after the 2016 Games. She finished her Olympic swimming career with a total of seven medals (more than any other athlete from Africa), including two gold medals.

(with inputs from syndicated feed)

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