Advertisement

Athletics supremo to step down

The chief of staff of the IAAF, world athletics’ governing body, says he will step aside from his role to allow an ethics committee to investigate emails he sent regarding Russian doping ahead of the 2013 world championships in Moscow.

Dec 23, 2015, updated Dec 23, 2015
World athletics was plunged into chaos amid allegations against the Russian Olympics team, seen here in 2012.

World athletics was plunged into chaos amid allegations against the Russian Olympics team, seen here in 2012.

On Monday, a leaked email sent by the official, Nick Davies, to Papa Massata Diack, the son of former IAAF president Lamine Diack and a former IAAF marketing consultant, discussed a “special dossier” that could be prepared to limit the impact of a series of positive tests by Russian athletes.

The IAAF’s lawyers said that the mail was leaked by Diack and a statement by Davies denied that it was evidence of any wrong-doing.

Meanwhile, Papa Diack has denied any involvement in bribery or corruption and says his father is also innocent.

Papa Diack has been questioned by French prosecutors over claims he was involved in a scheme for blackmailing athletes who failed drugs tests in order to allow them to continue to compete. France’s national financial prosecutor Eliane Houlette said last month that he played a “very active role” in the corruption.

Russian former London Marathon winner Liliya Shobukhova said she paid more than STG400,000 ($A828,600) to Russian athletics officials to have a positive test covered up.

Papa Diack and three other officials have been charged by the IAAF with ethics violations, with a verdict due in January, but he told the BBC on Tuesday: “There was no extortion of funds from any athlete.

“I’ve never met any athlete, any agent, any person in the world…asking to have a payment.

“I deal with corporate sponsors, I deal with governments, I deal with municipal government, I deal with Olympic committees, I never dealt with any athlete or any agent, so I reject those allegations.”

Lamine Diack, who was replaced as IAAF president by Sebastian Coe in August, is under investigation by French police on charges of corruption and money laundering. French prosecutors said on Tuesday his previous charge of “passive corruption” had now been upgraded to the more serious “corruption”.

InDaily in your inbox. The best local news every workday at lunch time.
By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement andPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

His son said the 82-year-old was also innocent.

“He’s never been involved in any corrupt system to extort money from athletes, I totally reject that,” Papa Diack said from his home in Senegal.

“Suddenly they are just going to destroy all he’s built over the last 16 years and all the 39 years he’s spent in the IAAF.”

All Russian athletes are currently banned from athletics following the report by an independent commission of the World Anti-Doping Agency that revealed state-sponsored doping on a massive scale.

-Reuters

Topics: athletics
Local News Matters
Advertisement
Copyright © 2024 InDaily.
All rights reserved.