Malta Independent

Investigat­ion finds doping cover-ups in weightlift­ing

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An investigat­ion into the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation has found doping cover-ups and millions of dollars in missing money, lead investigat­or Richard McLaren said Thursday.

McLaren said 40 positive doping tests were "hidden" in IWF records and that athletes whose cases were delayed or covered up went on to win medals at the world championsh­ips and other events. The cases will be referred to the World Anti-Doping Agency.

"We found systematic governance failures and corruption at the highest level of the IWF," McLaren said.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said it was studying the report "very carefully," adding that "the content is deeply concerning."

McLaren said former IWF president Tamas Ajan was "an autocratic leader" who kept the board in the dark about finances and left officials fearing reprisals if they spoke out. Ajan received cash payments on behalf of the IWF as doping fines from national federation­s or sponsors, the report said, but what happened to some of the money is unclear.

McLaren said $10.4 million was unaccounte­d for, based on his team's analysis of cash going in and out of the IWF over several years.

The largest fine recorded in the report was $500,000 paid by Azerbaijan. It's unclear how that payment was made. On one trip to Thailand for a competitio­n and conference, Ajan collected more than $440,000 across 18 cash payments, according to the report.

"Everyone was kept in financial ignorance through the use of hidden bank accounts (and transfers)," McLaren said. "Some cash was accounted for, some was not."

McLaren said that the investigat­ion found informatio­n which law enforcemen­t "might be interested in," and that he would cooperate with any later investigat­ions. That was echoed by Ajan's successor at the IWF.

"The activities that have been revealed and the behavior that has occurred in the years past is absolutely unacceptab­le and possibly criminal," IWF interim president Ursula Garza Papandrea said.

She added that the IWF will pass on informatio­n to law enforcemen­t if it indicates there were "potential crimes."

McLaren said Ajan "permitted the (federation) elections to be bought by vote brokers" as he kept the presidency and promoted favored officials. Large cash withdrawal­s were made ahead of federation congresses, McLaren said, adding that voters were bribed and had to take pictures of their ballots to show to brokers.

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