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December 23, 2015

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Diack hit with new graft charges

French magistrates have filed new, tougher corruption charges against former IAAF president Lamine Diack in connection with cover-ups of Russian doping.

Diack had previously been accused of “passive corruption”, on suspicion he took around 1 million euros (US$1.1 million) to cover up positive drug tests by Russian athletes.

An official with the Paris financial prosecutor’s office said yesterday that Diack is now accused of “active corruption”, which generally involves offering money or other promises in exchange for violating a rule.

The anonymous official said the new preliminary charges center on suspicions that Diack bribed Gabriel Dolle, the IAAF’s former anti-doping chief who is also under investigation, to delay reporting of violations by Russian athletes.

The preliminary charges allow magistrates more time to investigate before deciding whether to file formal charges and whether to send a case to trial. Diack, an 82-year-old former long jumper, is free on bail pending further probe but barred from leaving France.

The latest charges are part of a multi-pronged investigation into suspected wrongdoing at the International Association of Athletics Federations that has expanded rapidly in recent months.

Russia’s track and field federation was suspended by the IAAF after a World Anti-Doping Agency independent commission found evidence of systemic doping and cover-ups.

Diack’s son, Papa Massata Diack, a former IAAF marketing consultant also targeted by the French corruption probe, told the BBC that his father is in “good spirits” despite the investigation.

“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, so I find it very sad and I could not recognize certain acts or certain declarations made by certain people,” he was quoted as saying from Senegal.

A report in Le Monde on Monday alleged that another senior IAAF official, Nick Davies, tried to delay public identification of alleged Russian drug cheats ahead of the 2013 world championships in Moscow.

The French daily said it had a copy of an email sent by Davies to Papa Diack asking what “Russian ‘skeleton’ we have still in the cupboard regarding doping.”

Davies, formerly director of communications at IAAF and now deputy general secretary and close associate of IAAF President Sebastian Coe, strongly denied any wrongdoing.

In a statement, Davies said the email “was brain storming around media handling strategies to deal with the serious challenges we were facing around the image of the event.”

“No plan was implemented following that email and there is no possibility any media strategy could ever interfere with the conduct of the anti-doping process,” he added.




 

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