GOA Vice-president to attend IOC/INTERPOL workshop in Panama

In his capacity as Vice-president of the Guyana Olympic Association (GOA), Steve Ninvalle will attend a high-level workshop hosted by the International Criminal Police Organisation (INTERPOL), scheduled for October 1-2 in Panama.

The workshop brings together National Olympic Committees (NOCs) from Guyana, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago, Panama, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica and Mexico, and is being organised in collaboration with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), under its Olympic Movement Unit on the Prevention of the Manipulation of Competitions.

Participants will include Olympic Association officials, representatives from Ministries of Sport and Justice, as well as law enforcement agencies invited by INTERPOL.

Ninvalle is also Guyana’s Director of Sport and president of the Guyana Boxing Association.

A respected figure across the Caribbean as a sports administrator, Ninvalle was the first from CARICOM to be elected to the International Boxing Association (formerly AIBA) Executive Committee.

The multi-sectoral approach by the IOC and INTERPOL underlines the seriousness of the issue, recognising that safeguarding sport requires cooperation across sport, government and law enforcement.

At the heart of the event is the prevention of the manipulation of competitions, a critical threat to the integrity of sport worldwide.

INTERPOL, working closely with the IOC since 2014, has been at the forefront of fighting match-fixing and other forms of corruption in sport.

Their joint efforts have focused on strengthening investigative capacity, sharing intelligence, and educating sports bodies about the dangers of manipulation.

The importance of this workshop cannot be overstated. Competition manipulation, often driven by organised crime and illegal betting markets, has damaged the credibility of several major sports.

For instance, the 2013 Europol investigation uncovered widespread match-fixing across European football, linking over 380 matches to organised crime syndicates.

Similarly, in tennis, the Independent Review Panel found systemic cases of players being targeted by betting groups to influence match outcomes.

These examples highlight how manipulation not only undermines fair play, but also threatens athletes’ careers, fans’ trust, and the financial stability of sporting institutions.

INTERPOL has had to intervene in many of these instances by providing intelligence support, facilitating cross-border investigations, and building frameworks to help sports organisations respond effectively.

Through its cooperation with the IOC, INTERPOL has delivered global training programmes, created awareness campaigns, and worked directly with law enforcement and NOCs to ensure athletes and officials understand how manipulation occurs and how it can be prevented.

For countries like Guyana, participation in such workshops is crucial, as it ensures that sports administrators and government officials are equipped with the knowledge and tools to protect athletes and competitions from being exploited.

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