The Phnom Penh Post

Reforms and Russia again in IAAF focus

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AR E F ORM- DRI V E N Sebastian Coe and drugs-tainted Russia will again be in the spotlight of athletics’ world governing body when the IAAF gathers for three days of crunch meetings today.

A crucial part of the opening IAAF Council meeting will be dedicated to the latest update from Norwegian Rune Andersen, the head of the IAAF Taskforce looking into the steps Russia is taking to combat doping.

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s first enforced a ban on Russian athletes in internatio­nal competitio­n in November 2015 after a bombshell World Anti-Doping Agency ( WADA) report unveiled systematic state-sponsored doping and corruption.

Andersen will report to IAAF’s decision-making body whether he thinks Russia have since met the reinstatem­ent conditions set down. The initial ban has twice been extended, in March and June this year.

It was Andersen’s latter Taskforce report in Vienna that scuppered Russian athletes’ chances of competing at the Rio Games, despite a last-ditch campaign to overthrow the ban led by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Putin has in recent days, however, approved a law criminalis­ing doping in sports, while Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko has promised anti-doping inspectors full access to military cities which are normally closed to members of the public although often listed as training bases by many Russian athletes.

Stay ing wit h t he anti-doping theme, Coe will on Saturday preside over a Specia l I A AF Congress, a one-issue meeting concentrat­ing on t he governance structure reform proposals presented in his “Time for Change” document.

The reforms have already been given wholesale support by the IAAF Athletes Commission, whose members said they believed that the reforms would “set and enforce higher ethical standards and enable athletics to regain the credibilit­y and trust it deserves”.

Coe has gone out of his way to ensure his reform process is widely understood, having embarked on a roadshow in October and November that took in the Dominican Republic, Chile, Portugal, Australia, Qatar and South Africa.

The Briton, twice an Olympic 1500m gold medallist, is pushing for an independen­t drugs testing regime as part of his overhaul of world athletics, saying that “results management” has been a failure given “national interest involved”.

He is proposing an “independen­t Athletics Integrity Unit”, which will be responsibl­e for doping matters, taking powers away from national associatio­ns. The unit would also look into illegal betting and transfers of allegiance.

Other mooted reforms include a restructur­ing of the IAAF Council so that it has 50 percent female membership, new checks and balances on the president, and new vetting procedures on individual­s.

The proposed changes, which need a two-thirds’ majority to be passed at Saturday’s vote, have been brought about by the scandal which continues to engulf athletics.

‘Organised cover-up’

In the latest revelation, a weekend report by Germany’s ARD television and France’s Le Monde newspaper said the wanted son of ousted IAAF president Lamine Diack took millions of from Russian competitor­s in return for “total protection” from failed doping tests.

Six athletes each paid between 300,000 and 700,000 ($318,000-$740,000) to top officials including Papa Massata Diack, who is wanted by French authoritie­s but in hiding in his native Senegal, the report said.

His father, Lamine Diack, who was charged after standing down as IAAF president in August 2015, is under house arrest in France.

“The organised cover-up of suspected doping in the world of track and field has as such assumed a previously unimagined scale,” said ARD. “And once again, it is primarily athletes from one nation under scrutiny: Russia.”

 ?? KARIM JAAFAR/AFP ?? IAAF president Sebastian Coe talks with an AFP reporter on the sidelines of the 85th Asian Athletics Associatio­n (AAA) Council meeting in Doha on October 28.
KARIM JAAFAR/AFP IAAF president Sebastian Coe talks with an AFP reporter on the sidelines of the 85th Asian Athletics Associatio­n (AAA) Council meeting in Doha on October 28.

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