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Russians face major hurdles for return to Olympic track

The International Olympic Committee’s complex discussion about allowing Russian athletes to participate at the Paris Games in 2024 if their country is still at war provided no short-term help in improving the athletes’ standing among leaders in track and field, the biggest sport on the Olympic program.

In a year-end interview this week, World Athletics president Sebastian Coe suggested the Russian war in Ukraine, to say nothing of the still-active doping sanctions against Russia that have been in place since 2015, have led to a more difficult path for Russian track athletes to reach the IOC goal of participating as neutrals either at next year’s world championships or at the Olympics the year after that.

Coe sketched out a two-part process for Russian reinstatement. First, the doping sanctions would have to be lifted at a World Athletics council meeting in March, a prospect that seems more likely after a series of positive reports from a task force that monitors Russia’s compliance with reform efforts.

Only then, Coe said, would World Athletics begin debating whether to lift war-related sanctions against Russians, an outcome the IOC is pushing for and put into writing at its own Olympic summit last week. Coe had previously said the fate of Russia’s track athletes would be best served if Russia were to “get out of Ukraine.”

Pressed on exactly what it meant to “get out of Ukraine” — i.e., out of the Donbas region, large portions of which have effectively been under Russian control for years, or out of Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014, or something else — Coe responded: “I’m no military expert, and I’m certainly not trespassing into that space. All I’m saying is that has to be the objective.”

In February, shortly after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the IOC recommended that Russian and Belarusian athletes should be excluded from competition, citing concerns over safety and the integrity of competitions. Most Olympic sports, including track, followed the recommendation and imposed bans.

At the Olympic summit last week, which Coe did not attend because of a family wedding, Russia’s military status in Ukraine was not part of the conclusions that were made public. The Declaration of the 11th Olympic Summit expressed the Olympic ideal of keeping politics out of sports and encouraging athletes to compete in peace even if they came from warring countries. It sought further discussions about finding ways to allow Russian athletes who did not support the war to compete in major events.

It kept a prohibition on major events in Russia or Belarus and also of the Russian flags or colors being displayed at any sports event or meeting.

It also placed the onus on international sports federations (IFs) such as World Athletics to decide if the “protective measures” put in place shortly after Russia’s invasion in February, which essentially excluded Russian and Belarusian athletes because their safety could not be guaranteed, were still appropriate.

Coe said IFs have long been given the authority to determine which athletes can participate in their events. That was the authority World Athletics used to ban all but 10 Russians from the Tokyo Games because of the long-running doping case while most other sports were allowing full rosters.

“The one thing that came out of the Olympic Summit, and I agreed, was that the International Federations should be the ones to, in their words, ‘carefully evaluate whether the reasons for the protective measures still exist,’” Coe said, “and that is what we will do.”

___

More AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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The Philippines Just Passed a Bill to Create a Sovereign Wealth Fund. Here’s Why It’s Controversial

As 2022 draws to a close, lawmakers in the Philippines are pushing for the establishment of a sovereign wealth fund to purportedly help the country finance future economic development.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. had called for the immediate enactment of the fund’s implementing bill, which was initially proposed on Nov. 28. A revised version of the bill was passed by the House of Representatives on Thursday, just before Congress goes on Christmas holiday break. It now awaits a legislative counterpart from the Senate.

Marcos Jr., who was elected in May, vouches for the fund’s creation, telling reporters on Dec. 12 that it will bring “added investment” to the Southeast Asian nation of 110 million people. His economic team, meanwhile, have cited similar state-owned funds in Singapore and Indonesia as a testament to the potential success the Philippines could reap.

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

But the proposal to establish the Maharlika Investments Fund (MIF), as it’s been named, is highly controversial. (“Maharlika” is a Filipino word meaning upper-class that was co-opted by Marcos Jr.’s father, the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who falsely claimed it was the name of a World War II guerilla unit he led.) State-owned investment funds in nearby countries have faced mismanagement and corruption, and it’s not clear the proposal for one in the Philippines has the safeguards to be different.

Read More: A Dictator’s Son Rewrites History on TikTok in His Bid to Become the Philippines’ Next President

Over the last few weeks, analysts and critics have raised concerns that the fund may become a hotbed for scandal, like the 1MDB corruption case in 2015 involving the Malaysian sovereign wealth fund that resulted in the country’s former prime minister, Najib Razak, going to prison.

In response to criticism, lawmakers in the Philippines revised their plan for MIF, no longer making the president chair of the fund’s managing board and changing the source of its seed money from pension funds to central bank dividends.

But many still question the establishment of a sovereign wealth fund in the Philippines, given the inherent risks of any public investment venture, especially as a global recession looms and the Marcos family is no stranger to corruption issues and unexplained wealth. Groups of protestors staged rallies in front of the House of Representatives in the past week to denounce the fund’s creation.

Jayson Lamchek, research fellow at Deakin University Law School in Australia, says a sovereign wealth fund in the country could play out like a game of “cat and mouse” between politicians and the public. “If they go through this game, they may very well end up being swallowed up live by the politicians and the elite family,” Lamchek tells TIME.

“But they probably need to play that game because the sovereign wealth fund can benefit them if it’s designed well.”

What is a sovereign wealth fund?

Sovereign wealth funds differ from other government financial entities in that, unlike central banks that hold foreign currency reserves to manage national monetary policy, they’re focused on returns—and thus tend to have a higher risk tolerance.

Such funds vary in size, most of which are financed with revenues from natural resources, particularly energy commodities like oil and coal. The numerous sovereign wealth funds around the world are big enough to affect global markets.

At the beginning of this year, there were 161, managing more than $10 trillion in assets, according to Global SWF’s 2022 report—though many countries have more than one fund. In 2021, at least 70 countries had at least one sovereign wealth fund, according to research from IE University in Spain. China Investment Corporation in Beijing is the largest, according to Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute rankings, holding $1.35 trillion in assets. Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global follows closely behind. The U.S. has no federal sovereign wealth fund, but a number of states have funds that operate similarly.

In Southeast Asia, two of the largest funds are in Singapore, where the city-state’s money management allows it to use investment profits to cover up to 20% of the national budget. (One of these, Temasek Holdings, had a write-down of $275 million after cryptocurrency exchange FTX went bankrupt in November.) Indonesia launched its own sovereign wealth fund in 2021.

How will the Philippines finance its wealth fund?

Unlike Norway and neighbor Timor-Leste, the Philippines will not use revenues from natural resource windfalls to finance its proposed sovereign wealth fund. The Southeast Asian nation also does not have a current account surplus like Singapore. Instead, it will reportedly seed MIF with its central bank’s dividends and investible funds from the country’s Land Bank and Development Bank, after the public criticized initial plans to use pension funds that were, in 2018, at risk of bankruptcy. The latest version of the proposal does allow for pension agencies to invest in the fund in the future.

Lamchek says pension funds would be among the “absolute worst choices” to endow MIF, but bonds aren’t much better, he believes, arguing that investing with cash the government cannot afford to lose negates the idea of a sovereign wealth fund. “That’s really liabilities—not wealth,” he tells TIME.

Emerson Sanchez, a research fellow at the Institute for Infrastructure in Society at the Australian National University Crawford School of Public Policy in Canberra, says the Maharlika fund’s current financing strategy is “piling on risk after risk.”

The Philippines is still facing macroeconomic headwinds post-pandemic: despite robust growth, the country has $243 billion in foreign debt and inflation at a 14-year-high.

“There are several safeguards embodied in the MIF to ensure its transparency and accountability,” the chair of the House Committee on Banks and Financial Intermediaries Irwin Tieng told lawmakers earlier this week. The latest revised proposal, he said, ensures that the MIF will comply with the Santiago principles, a voluntary set of guidelines established by the International Monetary Fund and a coalition of sovereign wealth funds to promote standards of transparency and good governance in the management of sovereign wealth funds.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the central bank of the Philippines, had initially expressed concerns about transparency in governing the MIF, but it now backs the fund’s creation. The central bank’s governor Felipe Medalla said his concerns have been “completely addressed,” according to Reuters, adding that he doesn’t think the fund as currently proposed will negatively affect the bank’s ability to maintain price stability in the country.

What are the corruption risks of the Maharlika Investments Fund?

Finance experts have long raised concerns over sovereign wealth funds for their potential for corruption and mismanagement. Malaysia’s Najib was sentenced to 12 years in prison on charges of criminal breach of trust, abuse of power, and money laundering related to 1MDB. An estimated $4.5 billion was looted from the investment fund, with hundreds of millions of public dollars allegedly transferred to Najib’s personal bank accounts.

Singapore has also previously come under fire for its opaque sovereign wealth funds. The Singapore government has long argued that disclosing the assets under management of GIC, the other fund along with Temasek, is not in the “national interest.”

With the Philippines’ ranking 117th among 180 countries in the latest Corruption Perceptions Index, the public has good reason to fear potential malversation to do with the MIF.

The fund already has the appearance of a family affair. Three of the lawmakers who proposed the MIF were related to President Marcos Jr.—his son Ferdinand “Sandro” Alexander Marcos III, his cousin and House Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez, and Romualdez’s wife Yedda Marie.

The Marcos family accrued an estimated $10 billion in unexplained wealth while the late Marcos Sr. was in office; only a fraction has been recovered. Marcos Jr.’s mother, Imelda, was convicted of graft by the country’s top court in 2018. Marcos Jr. and Imelda also have a standing U.S. contempt order in relation to human rights violations during the Marcos patriarch’s dictatorship.

Read More: The West Will Work With the Philippines’ Next President, Even If He Is a Dictator’s Son

But not all Marcos relatives seem keen on creating the MIF: earlier this month, the President’s sister Senator Maria Imelda Josefa Remedios “Imee” Marcos expressed reservations about the fund, referring to the 1MDB scandal in Malaysia and the current unfavorable economic climate.

What is the best design for a sovereign wealth fund?

In 2021, Lamchek and Sanchez studied whether a Philippine sovereign fund would help manage the country’s energy resources, using the cases of Singapore, Indonesia, and Timor-Leste as case studies.

The two noted that sovereign welfare funds work best when given political independence, with Sanchez emphasizing the need for a gap between the executive branch of government and the fund’s board of directors. “Political patronage clouds sound investment decisions,” Sanchez warns.

But another way to thwart corruption in these wealth funds is to include direct benefits to the public, says Lamchek. In Alaska, eligible citizens receive dividends from the state’s permanent fund. Giving these sorts of payments would increase citizen engagement in the MIF, Lamchek says.

“It’s not enough, for example, that the sovereign wealth fund is transparent,” Lamchek tells TIME. “We need ordinary people involved.”

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Shaq — who starred in an FTX commercial in June — says he ‘was just a paid spokesperson’ for the exchange and doesn’t believe in crypto

Shaquille O'Neal gives a speech during an event at Doolittle Complex basketball courts in Las Vegas, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2021.Shaquille O’Neal gives a speech during an event at Doolittle Complex basketball courts in Las Vegas, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2021.

Erik Verduzco/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Getty Images

  • Shaquille O’Neal said he was paid to appear in an FTX ad and was never involved in the firm.
  • In the ad, he said he was “making crypto accessible to everyone” and that he was “all in.”
  • O’Neal was recently named in a lawsuit accusing FTX of using celebrities to trick investors.

NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal said he doesn’t believe in cryptocurrencies and was merely paid to endorse the now-imploded exchange FTX, per a Thursday report by CNBC’s Make It.

“A lot of people think I’m involved, but I was just a paid spokesperson for a commercial,” O’Neal told the outlet.

The former basketball star, who’s now an angel investor and businessman, starred in an FTX commercial released on June 2. In the ad, O’Neal said he was excited to partner with the exchange to “make crypto accessible to everyone.”

“I’m all in. Are you?” O’Neal says in the ad.

—FTX (@FTX_Official) June 1, 2022

O’Neal told CNBC that his friendship with fellow NBA great Stephen Curry was one of the reasons he agreed to appear in the FTX ad. Representatives for Curry did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

“People know I’m very, very honest. I have nothing to hide,” O’Neal said, per CNBC. “If I was heavily involved, I would be at the forefront, saying, ‘Hey.’ But I was just a paid spokesperson.”

When asked by the outlet if he was bullish on crypto, O’Neal said: “No.”

O’Neal is one of several celebrities named in a class-action lawsuit that was filed on November 15 against FTX, its big-name endorsers, and its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried.

The complaint, filed by investor Edwin Garrison, alleges that FTX used celebrities such as O’Neal, Curry, and fashion model Gisele Bündchen to attract investors to a Ponzi scheme, per court documents seen by Insider.

The crypto world was shaken when FTX filed for bankruptcy on November 11, and as its new CEO John Ray reported a litany of gross mismanagement practices at the firm.

The SEC has charged Bankman-Fried with fraud and accused him of funneling billions of dollars of customer funds into his own crypto hedge fund.

O’Neal warmed this year to the idea of endorsing crypto

Before appearing in the FTX commercial in June, O’Neal had publicly expressed skepticism toward cryptocurrencies. He told CNBC in September 2021 that he didn’t understand crypto.

“So I will probably stay away from it until I get a full understanding of what it is,” he said, per the outlet.

He also told Front Office Sports in June 2021 that he was wary of crypto endorsement offers.

“I always get these companies that say: ‘Hey, we’ll give you $900,000 in crypto to send out a tweet.’ So I have to say: ‘OK, if you’re going to give me a million dollars worth of crypto, then why do you need me?'” O’Neal told the outlet. “A couple of my friends got caught up in a little scam like that one time.”

However, he started teasing the idea of getting involved in crypto-related content in February, musing on Twitter that he could change his handle to SHAQ.SOL — a reference to a cryptocurrency run by blockchain platform Solana.

The NBA hall of fame member did not disclose how much money he received for appearing in the June FTX commercial.

Representatives for O’Neal did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

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The college student tracking Elon Musk’s private plane says he’ll continue monitoring Musk on different platforms: ‘If I give up now, it’s kind of like letting the big guy win’

Jack Sweeney and Elon MuskJack Sweeney and Elon Musk

Jack Sweeney and Getty

  • Jack Sweeney, the teen who tracked Elon Musk’s private jet, says he will keep tracking the plane.
  • Sweeney wrote in a Newsweek op-ed that he plans to track the jet on “different platforms.”
  • “If I give up now, it’s kind of like letting the big guy win,” Sweeney wrote.

Jack Sweeney, the college student known for “Elonjet,” a private plane-tracking Twitter account, says he doesn’t plan to stop monitoring Musk’s jet. 

Sweeney wrote in a Newsweek op-ed published on Thursday that he wants to keep tracking the plane on different social media platforms. 

“If I give up now, it’s kind of like letting the big guy win,” Sweeney wrote. 

Sweeney added in his op-ed that he does not care that “Elonjet” was suspended from Musk’s Twitter, saying that he already has a presence on Mastodon, Facebook, Truth Social, Instagram, and Telegram.

“I don’t have to follow Musk’s rules on other platforms, and I don’t have to worry about him watching my account,” Sweeney wrote. 

Twitter on Wednesday updated its “Private Information policy,” which now prohibits “sharing someone else’s live location in most cases.” But before that announcement, over 30 of Sweeney’s accounts were banned on Wednesday under Musk’s updated privacy policy. This suspension included accounts that tracked other private planes, like those owned by Jeff Bezos and former President Donald Trump. 

“Twitter was my core platform, as I had 500,000 followers, but my accounts are gaining speed on other platforms,” he added.

Sweeney said in his op-ed that he is “still a fan of Musk’s ventures,” despite being banned from Twitter.

Musk on Wednesday also threatened legal action against Sweeney, alleging that the publication of real-time location information led to a “crazy stalker” approaching a car that was carrying his son, X, in Los Angeles.

That’s a U-turn on his previous stance — Musk had tweeted in November that his “commitment to free speech extends even to not banning the account following my plane, even though that is a direct personal safety risk.”

Sweeney referenced Musk’s recent tweets in the op-ed, saying “I don’t think my Elonjet account could have led a ‘crazy stalker’ to his car.”

“I’m tracking his plane, not the car, so I don’t see how it could be connected,” he added. 

Regarding the threat of legal action from Musk, Sweeney says he feels “slightly” intimidated, but gathers that there “doesn’t seem to be any legal ground for a lawsuit.”

“I’m just posting information that’s already out there,” Sweeney wrote. 

Musk did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

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Twitter is now blocking tweets that include links to Mastodon, its competitor

elon muskElon Musk.

Muhammed Selim Korkutata/Getty Images

  • Twitter appears to be banning the posting of links to its competitor, Mastodon.
  • Insider’s attempt to publish tweets containing Mastodon links were met with an error message.
  • The error message identified the tweet’s content as “potentially harmful.” 

Twitter appears to be blocking tweets that contain links to Mastodon, a competing social-media platform. 

On Thursday evening, Insider attempted to publish ten tweets from three separate Twitter accounts, all containing links to various Mastodon user profiles. Each attempt was met with an error message that read: “Your Tweet couldn’t be sent because this link has been identified by Twitter or our partners as being potentially harmful. Visit our Help Center to learn more.” 

Other Twitter users also noticed on Thursday evening that they were unable to post links to Mastodon, a platform often touted as an alternative to Twitter

—Christopher Hooks (@cd_hooks) December 16, 2022

Among them was NBC journalist Ben Collins, who found a workaround to post his Mastodon link by breaking up the URL with a set of brackets. 

—Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) December 16, 2022

 

Also on Thursday, Twitter suspended the official Mastodon Twitter account. The move appeared to be a part of a raft of account suspensions that included the accounts of CNN journalist Donie O’Sullivan, The Washington Post’s Drew Harwell, The New York Times’ Ryan Mac, as well as independent journalists Aaron Rupar, Keith Olbermann, and Tony Webster.

Musk and representatives for Mastodon did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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