Daily Dispatch

Coe’s denials don’t fly in dope row

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ALLEGATION­S that world athletics chief Sebastian Coe misled British lawmakers intensifie­d yesterday after new e-mails appeared to show he was “made aware” of corruption claims concerning the Russian doping scandal four months before they became public.

Coe, the president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s, told a House of Commons committee in December 2015 he was “not aware” of specific allegation­s of corruption in Russian athletics until a German documentar­y in December 2014.

But an e-mail published yesterday by the culture, media and sport committee from British athletics great Coe, a two-time Olympic champion, to the IAAF’s ethics commission in August 2014, stated: “I have now been made aware of the allegation­s.”

Coe, a member of Britain’s unelected House of Lords, told Parliament in 2015:

“I was certainly not aware of the specific allegation­s that had been made around the corruption of antidoping processes in Russia.”

MPs had wanted Coe to re-appear before the committee following evidence from former athlete David Bedford that appeared to contradict that of the IAAF president.

Coe, the Olympic 1 500m champion at both the 1980 and 1984 Games in Moscow and Los Angeles respective­ly, has yet to return to the committee but has agreed to two requests to make public correspond­ence he had with Michael Beloff, the chairman of the IAAF ethics commission, and a leading lawyer.

“Whatever excuse he gives, it is clear that Lord Coe decided not to share with the committee informatio­n that was relevant to our inquiry on doping in sport,” House of Commons culture, media and sport committee chairman Damian Collins said.

“The committee asked him about his knowledge of doping in Russian athletics and of corruption within the sport. In his answers, he gave the impression that he was unaware of specific allegation­s.

“Thanks to evidence that was presented by the BBC Panorama programme last year, and by David Bedford to the committee this January, we can see that he was aware, at least in general terms, of the allegation­s that had been brought forward by the Russian athlete Liliya Shobukhova.”

Bedford, a former 10 000m world record holder, told the committee he had sent Coe – when he was vicepresid­ent of the IAAF – an e-mail with an attachment in August 2014 which contained an explosive allegation.

Andrei Baranov, the agent of Russian marathon runner Shobukhova, claimed she had been blackmaile­d by Russian and IAAF officials, including Papa Massata Diack, the then IAAF president Lamine Diack’s son, to the tune of 000 (R6.5-million) over a failed dope test.

Coe said he never opened the attachment and sent it on instead to the IAAF ethics commission and that the first he knew of the allegation­s was in a German documentar­y in December 2014.

Russia remains suspended by the IAAF after it was kicked out in November 2015 over allegation­s of “state-sponsored doping” in a move that saw athletes banned from internatio­nal competitio­n and the track and field team barred from last year’s Rio Olympic Games. — AFP

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