Malta Independent

Massive sports corruption case finally heard at Paris trial

- John Leicester Associated Press

A sports corruption trial involving allegation­s of doping cover-ups and illicit payoffs at the top of track and field opened yesterday in Paris.

In six days of hearings, the Paris court is due to hear evidence that Russian athletes paid millions of dollars to hide their suspected doping so they could compete at the Olympics in 2012 and other competitio­ns.

Lamine Diack, who served as president of the sport’s governing body for nearly 16 years, is one of the alleged recipients of the payments. Diack, 87, was present in court, wearing a white face mask.

The court briefly considered but then rejected a request from a lawyer for Papa Massata Diack, one of Lamine Diack’s sons who is also a defendant in the case, that the trial be delayed because two of his other lawyers weren’t able to attend the trial because of coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns.

The trial had already been delayed from January to allow the inclusion of new evidence.

Papa Massata Diack lives in Senegal, shielded from an internatio­nal arrest warrant issued by France, and did not attend Monday’s hearing.

As IAAF president, Diack was one of the most influentia­l men in Olympic sports, presiding over an era when Usain Bolt made track and field wildly popular. But Diack’s legacy, and the IAAF’s credibilit­y, took a beating after he stepped down in 2015. He was arrested in France and investigat­ors revealed accusation­s of athletes being squeezed for payments to cover up their doping cases.

Diack is being tried for corruption, money laundering and breach of trust. Prosecutor­s say he directly or indirectly solicited €3.45 million from athletes suspected by the IAAF of doping who paid to have their names cleared so they could continue competing. About two dozen Russian athletes were reportedly involved.

Prosecutor­s also charged Diack for involvemen­t in a $1.5 million payment from Russia for use in electoral politics in his native Senegal. Prosecutor­s say the money was creamed off sponsorshi­p and TV rights deals, negotiated with Russian officials. Prosecutor­s say the money was to finance presidenti­al and legislativ­e election campaigns in Senegal in 2012, in exchange for slowing down doping cases targeting Russian athletes.

Diack is also accused of having enabled his son to embezzle IAAF sponsorshi­p revenue from Russia’s VTB Bank, Chinese oil firm Sinopec and broadcaste­r CCTV, South Korean tech giant Samsung and others.

Papa Massata Diack also faces corruption, money laundering and breach of trust charges. Senegal has refused France’s extraditio­n requests for the former IAAF marketing consultant.

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