Amateur boxing's crisis-hit governing body Tuesday said it had done everything asked to clean up its act and warned of legal action if stripped of the right to organise the event at the Tokyo Games.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has frozen the sport's preparations for next year's showpiece competition as it seeks proof that the International Boxing Federation (AIBA) has done enough to address allegations of bout-fixing at the Rio Olympics in 2016.
A decision on whether it will run the boxing programme in Tokyo is set to be made on May 22. If barred, the IOC has said it will step in to ensure the sport still appears in the Japanese capital.
AIBA said in a statement to AFP that it will "defend its legitimate right" to organise boxing in Tokyo and "will review all of its options, including legal, given that the IOC has breached the Olympic Charter".
The AIBA executive committee will meet on May 18 in Lausanne to fine tune its position.
The governing body's chief executive Tom Virgets insisted they had met all the requirements stipulated by the IOC.
"We believe as an organisation that we have done everything that has been asked
"Every single document asked, we produced, every single requirement we have met, including our president self-suspending, the same manner as IOC members self-suspend when they have problems."
Asked if AIBA would take the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport if barred, Virgets replied: "We don't know, this is why we have to explore what are our options, it would be premature for me to speculate what the decision will be."
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