Kuwait Times

Coe gets new term as IAAF chief

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DOHA: Britain’s Sebastian Coe was re-elected unopposed yesterday as president of the IAAF for a second term following four years dominated by doping and the issue of gender. The former Olympic and world champion middle-distance runner became head of world athletics’ governing body in 2015 and receives his second mandate just two days before the World Athletics Championsh­ips open in Doha.

“I genuinely am very pleased and proud of the way the sport has come together,” said Coe, 62, following his re-election. “Two-hundred changes, the Athletics Integrity Unit — no sport has a unit in the same space, it’s about malpractic­e, corruption. “In making those achievemen­ts, I recognise we have had to detour from being able to really focus as hard as I would have liked in the early years around the field of play. We’re now in the position to really genuinely do that.”

Coe, who took over the reins during a period

of turmoil in world athletics, was re-elected by unanimous vote of the 203 delegates attending the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s’ Congress in Doha.

Four years ago the IAAF was in chaos as a result of far-reaching corruption allegation­s. They included damaging charges of links between outgoing president Lamine Diack, his influentia­l son Papa Massata, and a Russian cover-up of a state-sponsored doping conspiracy.

During his first term, Coe set up the independen­t Athletics Integrity Unit which serves as watchdog dedicated to cleaning up corruption in the sport. “It’s been a tough four years, the first two were the reforms — the second two years were really making sure they were implemente­d,” he said.

“(We) got here pretty much implementi­ng everything we said we’d do. “I want the next four years to be the fun bit... I want the sport to grow.” Coe is notably credited with tackling the issue of state-sponsored Russian doping, with the IAAF maintainin­g a tough stance and banning Russia from competitio­n since November 2015. Gender has also been a complex issue, with South African runner Caster Semenya spearheadi­ng the fight against IAAF rules on “hyperandro­genic” competitor­s whose significan­ce goes beyond the boundaries of the sport.

The new regulation­s came into force on May 8 and oblige women with higher than normal male hormone levels to artificial­ly lower their testostero­ne to run at some distances. Semenya, the best-known athlete to fall foul of the rules, has refused to take the medication and consequent­ly will not take part in Doha.

Semenya initially won a legal battle, enabling her to compete in 800m races, before a Swiss court overruled the decision. Coe said “the issue of transgende­r more generally is going to be dominating, not just athletics, but all sports”.

Two female Kenyan middle-distance runners have been dropped from the team for Doha due to high levels of testostero­ne. Ximena Restrepo, a former sprinter from Colombia, was elected as an IAAF vice-president at the congress, the first time the body has elevated a woman to the position. “It’s a great moment for me and my country,” she said. “I would like to thank you Seb. Because of the changes you’ve done to the constituti­on, women are having more opportunit­ies than before.”

 ?? — AFP ?? DOHA: IAAF’s first female vice president, former Colombian sprinter Ximena Restrepo, poses next to IAAF’s president Britain’s Sebastian Coe following his re-election for a second term in the Qatari capital Doha yesterday.
— AFP DOHA: IAAF’s first female vice president, former Colombian sprinter Ximena Restrepo, poses next to IAAF’s president Britain’s Sebastian Coe following his re-election for a second term in the Qatari capital Doha yesterday.

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