Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet faces legal investigation over pay

The probe is a major blow for Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet, the public face of the Paris Olympics. PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS – French investigators have opened a legal probe into the pay of Paris Olympics chief organiser Tony Estanguet, a source said on Feb 6, in an embarrassing development six months before the Games begin.

The inquiry by magistrates specialised in financial crimes began “last week” and will look into the manner in which Estanguet receives his pay as head of the organising committee, the source said on condition of anonymity.

The triple gold medal-winning Olympic canoeist had so far been spared the legal problems that have embroiled other members of the Paris organising team.

His annual remuneration of €270,000 (S$390,000) before tax and bonuses was made public in 2018, after a furore over reports that he would receive almost double that amount.

But according to revelations in the investigative newspaper Le Canard Enchaine last October, Estanguet uses his own company to bill the organising committee monthly, instead of drawing a salary.

The arrangement is to avoid a salary cap imposed on charities with the same status as the organising committee.

A spokesperson for the committee said it was “astonished” by news of the investigation, given that Estanguet’s package had been approved by the board and officials in the economy ministry.

The probe is a major blow for the 45-year-old, the public face of the Paris Olympics, who is seeking to focus attention on preparations for the July 26-Aug 11 Games.

The Olympics have been repeatedly tarnished by corruption, either over how the Games were awarded or the lucrative construction and services contracts.

The Paris organising committee was already the subject of three investigations into the possible misuse of public money and favouritism in the awarding of contracts.

The offices of the committee and Games infrastructure group Solideo have been searched by police, as have the homes of two senior organising committee figures, Etienne Thobois and Edouard Donnelly.

Those cases revolve in part around sports management or events companies founded by senior Games staff before they started working for the organising committee. Around 20 contracts are under the microscope, totalling tens of million of euros, one judicial source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

France’s Anti-Corruption Agency had flagged possible problems with Estanguet’s pay arrangement in a report in 2021 because of the organising committee’s status as a charity.

The spokesperson said that his pay had been approved by the organisation’s pay committee, composed of independent experts, and approved by the Economic and Financial Controller General in the economy ministry.

Given that Estanguet usually chairs the board, it had met without him when discussing his remuneration.

Organisers of Paris 2024 have been determined to showcase a different sort of Olympics, shorn of the common problems of vast overspending, wasteful infrastructure investment and corruption.

The 2016 Rio Olympics left the city nearly bankrupt, while large-scale graft allegations shocked the public.

The former Brazilian Olympics boss and the governor of the city were both convicted afterwards.

Several businessmen have also been found guilty of bribing a Tokyo Olympics committee member, in a scandal that soured the mood over the 2020 Games held in 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Despite the legal problems, the Paris Games appear broadly on track, with almost all of the main building work finished and the budget overspend relatively small compared with past editions.

This week will see the committee unveil the medal designs, while a brand new venue which is set to host the basketball and rhythmic gymnastics events will open its doors at the weekend.

The athletes’ village will be inaugurated by President Emmanuel Macron on Feb 29.

The French sports world, including football, rugby and tennis, has been shaken by a string of scandals in recent years.

The head of the French Football Federation, Noel le Graet, stepped down in 2023 after accusations of sexual harassment, while the head of the rugby federation Bernard Laporte was convicted of corruption. AFP

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