Yahoo – AFP, Damien Stroka, 14 January 2016
Munich (Germany) (AFP) - A World Anti-Doping Agency report said Thursday that corruption was "embedded" at the world athletics body, piling pressure on its new leader Sebastian Coe.
Athletics'
governing council must have been aware of the corruption scandal,
according to
a new report by the World Anti-Doping Agency (AFP Photo/Gabriel Bouys)
|
Munich (Germany) (AFP) - A World Anti-Doping Agency report said Thursday that corruption was "embedded" at the world athletics body, piling pressure on its new leader Sebastian Coe.
The
International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) must have known about
corruption orchestrated by its former leader Lamine Diack, and about doping in
Russia, it claimed.
But Richard
Pound, the former WADA president who wrote the report, backed Coe as the best
person to lead reforms of the world body.
Despite
that support Pound still produced a litany of accusations against the IAAF.
It was not
tough enough with "several countries" including Russia, the report
said, indicating that doping scandals were not limited to Russia.
Veteran
Senegalese powerbroker Diack faces criminal charges in France over allegations
that he took more than one million euros ($1.1 million) in bribes from Russian
athletes and officials to cover up failed drug tests.
"The
corruption was embedded in the organisation," Pound said in a damning
comment on the IAAF's handling of drug abuse.
Pound said
there was a "complete breakdown of governance structures and lack of
accountability" at the IAAF.
"It
cannot be ignored or dismissed as attributable to the odd renegade acting on
his own," he said of the corruption.
Pound said
the the IAAF governing council, which included Coe, had to be aware of the
corruption.
Pound backs Coe
Graphic on
doping methods banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
(AFP
Photo/Adrian Leung/John Saeki)
|
Pound backs Coe
"The
IAAF Council could not have been unaware of the extent of doping in athletics
and the non-enforcement of applicable anti-doping rules," Pound said.
Former
British running legend Coe, who took over the IAAF leadership in August when
Diack stood down, sat in the audience as the report was presented.
And when
asked about reforms to the world body, Pound said: "As far as the ability
of Lord Coe to remain at the head of the IAAF, I think it's a fabulous
opportunity for the IAAF to seize this opportunity and under strong leadership
to move forward out of this.
"There's
an enormous amount of reputational recovery to do here and, descending to
personalities, I can't think of anyone better than Lord Coe to lead that. So
all our fingers are crossed in that respect."
Coe later
told AFP: "The journey back to trust will take far longer and will be a
painful process."
He added:
"We can't sit here begging for trust. We have to show by every action that
we take that we earn that trust.
"Many
of the recommendations that are contained in the report today we will look at
them very, very closely and when we think we can and we should absorb them into
our own reform process, we will."
Interpol wanted notice
World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) independent commission chairman Dick
Pound attends a
press conference in Unterschleissheim, southern Germany,
on January 14, 2016
(AFP Photo/Lukas Barth)
|
Interpol wanted notice
The first
part of Pound's report, released in November said there was a
"state-sponsored" doping system in Russia, which has since been
suspended by the IAAF.
The new
report said Diack had told a lawyer he would need to make a deal with Russia's
President Vladimir Putin to ensure nine Russian athletes accused of doping
would not compete at the 2013 world championships in Moscow.
The report
told of a sudden increase from $6 million to $25 million for Russian rights to
televise the 2013 world championships. This was provided by a Russian bank.
Diack
handpicked a lawyer to handle Russian doping cases even though he had little
experience with anti-doping measures, the report added.
Richard
McLaren, a lawyer who was part of the investigation commission, said that
Diack's advisor Habib Cisse deliberately held up sending warning notices to
Russia about drug failures.
He said the
extortion "went beyond sporting corruption and may have been criminal in
nature".
Cisse is
facing charges in France along with his former boss, Diack's son Papa Massata
Diack and Gabriel Dolle, the former IAAF anti-doping doctor.
Interpol on
Thursday said it had issued a wanted notice for Papa Massata Diack.
Sebastian
Coe was appointed president of the International Association of
Athletics
Federation (IAAF) in 2015 (AFP Photo/Lukas Barth)
|
According
to McLaren, Cisse and Papa Massata Diack put up a "formidable barrier to
the effective operation" of the IAAF's efforts to clamp down on doping.
Several
IAAF staff have said they sought to draw attention to the doping abuses to
leaders but were ignored.
"There
was an evident lack of political appetite within the IAAF to confront Russia
with the full extent of its known and suspected doping activities," the
Pound report said.
Coe has
insisted he knew nothing about the corruption and that there was no cover up
even though internal IAAF correspondence indicates athletics leaders expressed
concern about problems in Russia as far back as 2009.
Pound
warned that Kenya "clearly" also had a doping problem but that he had
only had a mandate to investigate Russia.
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