In 1965, SANROC was banned by the South African government, and Dennis Brutus re-established it in exile in London. The
Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) allowed SANROC to affiliate in place of SANOC. (Brundage later made SANROC change "Olympic" to "Open" in its name.) At the 1967 IOC conference in
Tehran, SANOC committed to sending a single mixed-race team to the
1968 Summer Olympics in
Mexico City. Separate racial committees would nominate athletes for each race to the combined team. Members from different races could compete against each other at the Games, though not in South Africa. The IOC deferred decision till its meeting at the
1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble. In September 1967, a three-member IOC commission visited South Africa, reporting back in January 1968. It was led by
Lord Killanin, a future IOC president, who resigned from the Irish Anti-Apartheid Society to forestall allegations of bias; the other members were
Ade Ademola, a
black Nigerian, and Reginald Alexander, a
white Kenyan. Killanin later recalled that Ademola was repeatedly snubbed in South Africa, and that of whites they interviewed, athletes favoured integrated competition, administrators less so, and politicians
Frank Waring and
John Vorster not at all. To Killanin's surprise, a postal ballot of IOC members decided in February that SANOC had made sufficient progress in to be invited to the 1968 Games, on the understanding that its team would be multiracial and remaining discrimination would be ended by the 1972 Games. This verdict prompted the SCSA countries to withdraw; in the US, the
American Committee on Africa organised a boycott by
African American athletes; the
Eastern Bloc also threatened a boycott. ==1969–70==