Kuwait Times

IOC ethics committee looks into Rio payment claims

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Organisers of the 2016 Rio Olympics denied on Friday that vote buying helped to secure the Games after a French newspaper reported that a Brazilian businessma­n made payments to the son of an Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) member before the vote.

Le Monde said a company linked to Brazilian businessma­n Arthur Cesar de Menezes Soares Filho paid $1.5 million to Papa Massata Diack, son of Lamine Diack who was then Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) president, three days before the 2009 decision on the host city for the 2016 Games.

Rio lost the first vote to Madrid but bounced back to win the nomination on a third ballot, by 66 votes to 32. A representa­tive for Menezes Soares Filho could not be immediatel­y reached for comment.

Le Monde also reported that Papa Massata Diack had paid almost $300,000 to prominent IOC member Frankie Fredericks, who said he has done nothing wrong and that the money was for “services rendered” to promote the sport in Africa.

The IOC said on Friday that its commission has started investigat­ing the allegation­s. “The IOC remains fully committed to clarifying this situation, working in co-operation with the (French) prosecutor,” the organisati­on said in a statement.

Rio 2016 Games spokesman Mario Andrada told Reuters: “The vote was clean. Rio’s victory was very clear. The French investigat­ion concerns six members of the IOC and six members would not have changed the result at all.”

Le Monde said that three days before the October 2009 vote in Copenhagen, Pamodzi Consulting, a company owned by Papa Massata Diack, received the $1.5 million payment from Matlock Capital Group, a holding company based in the British Virgin Islands. Diack, whose father Lamine is awaiting trial in France on aggravated money laundering and corruption charges, also received $500,000 from Matlock Capital Group through a Russian bank account, Le Monde added.

Papa Massata Diack was banned for life from athletics last year over multi-million dollar corruption claims. He was not immediatel­y available to comment but has previously denied any involvemen­t in bribery or corruption and says his father Lamine is also innocent. Le Monde said Papa Massata Diack transferre­d almost $300,000 to a company linked to Fredericks, a multiple Olympic and world medallist over 100 and 200 metres. Namibian Fredericks, now a member of the IAAF’s ruling Council who also heads the IOC evaluation commission for the 2024 Olympic bids, told Le Monde the money was paid for work he did to promote athletics in Africa between 2007 and 2011. “The payment has nothing whatsoever to do with the Olympic Games and I was not an IAAF board member at the time and did not breach any regulation or rule of ethics,” he told Le Monde.

The IOC said: “As far as Mr Fredericks is concerned, he informed the IOC and explained the situation and emphasised his innocence immediatel­y upon being contacted by the journalist.—Reuters

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