Oman Daily Observer

FARAH DOCTOR TO BRIEF UK LAWMAKERS IN DRUGS PROBE

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LONDON: The doctor who gave athletics great Mo Farah a controvers­ial supplement is to appear before British lawmakers on Wednesday as part of an ongoing inquiry into doping in sport.

Dr Robin Chakravert­y, formerly of UK Athletics, is to give evidence to the House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) committee that has previously unearthed damaging details about the approach to drug rules of senior figures in British Cycling.

Chakravert­y, now working with the England football team, gave Farah an intravenou­s infusion of L-carnitine before the distance runner’s 2014 London Marathon debut.

L-carnitine is a naturally occurring compound which turns body fat into energy and can be found in animal products such as meat, fish and milk.

Athletes are allowed to take it provided it is not infused in a quantity greater than 50 millilitre­s every six hours.

That British distance-runner Farah used the supplement was made public after a report from the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) was leaked.

There have also been reports that USADA was unable to determine how much Farah had received because UK Athletics had not recorded the amount correctly.

Four-time Olympic champion Farah, who trains in the United States with his Portland-based coach Alberto Salazar, has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

So too has Salazar, who two years ago was the subject of a BBC report alleging he administer­ed testostero­ne to American distance runner Galen Rupp in 2002 when Rupp — a training partner of Farah at the Nike Orgeon Project — was only 16.

The BBC report also alleged Salazar encouraged the misuse of prescripti­on drugs, something the coach has vehemently denied.

CMS committee chairman Damian Collins MP said on Tuesday: “In this hearing the committee wants to look at how the anti-doping rules and the protocols around athletes’ use of medication is policed by people working within sport.

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