Jamaica Gleaner

Diack turns on son in corruption trial

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PARIS, FRANCE (AP):

FORMER WORLD Athletics president Lamine Diack pointed a finger of blame at his son, saying he behaved like “a thug”, as he was quizzed in detail for the first time in court yesterday on charges that the governing body of track and field became a nest of corruption and doping cover-ups under his leadership.

The degree to which Diack was aware of the alleged squeezing of hush-money from Russian athletes suspected of doping remained unclear from his often confused, contradict­ory and uncertain testimony. Frequently, the 87-year-old Diack seemed not to have fully understood or heard lengthy, detailed questions posed by the panel of judges.

Diack acknowledg­ed, however, that he had intervened in the management of suspected cases of doping by Russian athletes, giving instructio­ns that they be handled in a way that would avoid a scandal that could disrupt negotiatio­ns with a Russian sponsor and tarnish the 2013 World Championsh­ips in Moscow.

Rather than having a group of Russian athletes being sanctioned at the same time, “we said the procedures should be spread out”, Diack said.

OVERRIDING CONCERN

He repeatedly said that his overriding concern had been to secure long-term funding for the IAAF, including by wrapping up the sponsorshi­p deal with Russian bank VTB.

“It was essential. For that I was prepared to make compromise­s,” Diack said.

Prosecutor­s say he did much more than just that. Diack and one of his sons, Papa Massata Diack, are on trial on charges of corruption, money laundering and breach of trust. The son is being tried in his absence, having fled in 2015 to Senegal, where he lives. They are accused of having conspired in a scheme that allegedly squeezed millions of dollars in hush-money from athletes who paid to avoid doping sanctions and keep competing.

Pressed by the chief judge about his son’s role, Diack at first gave an inaudible response before saying: “He conducted himself like a thug.”

The prosecutio­n alleges that Diack abused his position to put Papa Massata Diack, who worked as an IAAF marketing consultant, at the centre of a system that enabled the son to cream off large chunks from the governing body’s revenues.

But when the IAAF’s lawyer put it to Diack in court that his son siphoned millions from the VTB deals alone, Diack said he hadn’t known.

The prosecutio­n also alleges that the father-son partnershi­p worked together in hushing up suspected Russian doping cases for money. Diack denies the charge.

His lawyer, Simon Ndiaye, said outside the court that Diack wasn’t aware of athletes being squeezed for hush-money.

‘The prosecutio­n also alleges that the father-son partnershi­p worked together in hushing up suspected Russian doping cases for money. Diack denies the charge.’

 ?? AP ?? Former president of World Athletics, Lamine Diack (left), arrives at the Paris courthouse ahead of his corruption trial on Wednesday.
AP Former president of World Athletics, Lamine Diack (left), arrives at the Paris courthouse ahead of his corruption trial on Wednesday.

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