Malta Independent

Athletics overwhelmi­ngly backs broad reforms

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Athletics leaders have overwhelmi­ngly approved broad changes championed by the sport’s president, Sebastian Coe, to turn a corner on reputation-wrecking corruption and doping scandals.

Coe’s “Time for Change” package of reforms to the sport’s governance won a 95 percent majority from 192 countries on Saturday that cast valid votes at a special congress of the IAAF.

Warning that “we cannot let this happen again,” Coe said too much power had been concentrat­ed in too few hands under his predecesso­r, Lamine Diack, now facing corruption and money-laundering charges in France.

“Our sport, our family, is under threat,” he said.

Delegates stood up one after the other to voice support for Coe’s calls for bold change before casting ballots.

“We need to act now to save our sport,” said women’s marathon record-holder, Paula Radcliffe, speaking for Britain.

Most notably, Coe gets his wish for a new unit, largely independen­t of the IAAF, to handle doping cases involving internatio­nal-level athletes, taking that job away from IAAF member countries.

The IAAF argues the change will quicken the punishment of cheats, make punishment­s more uniform, and remove opportunit­ies for favoritism and corruption.

The IAAF wants the socalled integrity unit launched by April.

Women will be equally represente­d on the IAAF ruling council by 2023, and council members — including the president — will be limited to no more than three four-year terms.

There will be broader vetting of IAAF officials, and athletes will double their council representa­tion from one seat to two.

The massive support from delegates for the changes represente­d a significan­t victory for Coe, whose presidency was almost immediatel­y plunged into crisis after he took over from Diack in August 2015.

Coe recalled how French police officers raided IAAF offices, seizing files, when he was just settling in.

He noted that recent additional “grotesque” revelation­s of wrongdoing under Diack spoke of “extraordin­ary sums of money allegedly changing hands.”

“You should all feel violated,” Coe said.

“This is money that could have been used for the developmen­t

“We’re putting in place a framework that should have been there years ago,” he said.

The vote of 182 countries for, with just 10 against, wasn’t the only boost for the IAAF’s efforts to turn a new page.

Japanese sportswear manufactur­er Asics was set to be unveiled as a new sponsor on Saturday, after Adidas cut short its commercial agreement with the IAAF that had been due to run until 2019.

An IAAF official who spoke on condition of anonymity because Coe hadn’t yet announced the deal, said Asics is signing up for at least three years, through the 2017 and 2019 world championsh­ips.

While some delegates expressed reservatio­ns about the reform package and the open vote that made it possible to see which countries opposed the measures, many others took the floor to voice support and warn that the sport risked being left behind if it failed to send a strong message of embracing reform.

“We have to save athletics,” said Ethiopian running great Haile Gebrselass­ie, president of his country’s athletics federation.

“It does need cleaning,” said former Olympic and world javelin champion Andreas Thorkildse­n.

“That’s just a fact.”

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