China Daily

Faked photo puts Kipsang out of the picture

- By MURRAY GREIG

A faked photograph has cost former marathon world-record holder Wilson Kipsang of Kenya a four-year suspension from competitio­n for violating anti-doping rules.

Kipsang used a photo of an alleged traffic accident to justify one of four missed test appointmen­ts, the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) said on Friday.

World Athletics said Kipsang, a bronze medalist at the 2012 Olympics, had four missed appointmen­ts between April 2018 and May 2019. Three such failures in a 12-month span lead to an automatic ban.

Kipsang, 38, said he missed his test on May 17, 2019 due to a traffic accident involving an overturned truck and submitted a photo of the crash. However, an AIU investigat­ion revealed the image was from an accident that took place on Aug 19, 2019.

“The World Athletics Disciplina­ry Tribunal has banned long-distance runner Wilson Kipsang of Kenya for four years with effect from Jan 10, 2020, for whereabout­s failures and tampering by providing false evidence and witness testimony,” the AIU said in a statement.

“The athlete engaged in fraudulent and deceitful conduct by providing deliberate­ly misleading and false informatio­n to the AIU in an attempt to obstruct and delay the investigat­ion into his explanatio­n and/or prevent normal procedures from occurring, namely the recording of a missed test against him,” it added.

Kipsang was provisiona­lly suspended in January.

Jackson Tuwei, president of Athletics Kenya, said the ruling is “very sad” news for the east African nation.

“Athletes should learn from such consequenc­es because these are the things that we keep talking about every day. And unfortunat­ely we still continue getting these kinds of results,” he said.

“It affects everybody. It demoralize­s even ourselves. Why do they continue getting into that, particular­ly top athletes, elite athletes, who should be role models? They are giving a bad example.”

Tampering or attempted tampering with any part of doping control results in a mandatory four-year ban.

Kipsang’s competitiv­e results from April 12, 2019 to Jan 10, 2020 were also disqualifi­ed. He has the right to appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

The runner’s management company said that “no prohibited substance was ever found” and indicated it would study the decision and consider an appeal.

“We emphasize that there is no case of use of doping,” the company said in a statement.

“The decision is not final and conclusive yet. Wilson has the opportunit­y to appeal the decision at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.”

Kipsang joins a list of compatriot­s who have been sanctioned by World Athletics in recent years, including 2008 Olympic 1,500m champion Asbel Kiprop, former Boston and Chicago Marathon winner Rita Jeptoo and 2016 Olympic marathon champion Jemimah Sumgong.

Kenya was among the countries placed on the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA’s) compliance watch list in 2016.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Wilson Kipsang, pictured after his 2017 Tokyo Marathon win, has been banned from competitio­n for four years.
REUTERS Wilson Kipsang, pictured after his 2017 Tokyo Marathon win, has been banned from competitio­n for four years.

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