The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Lord Coe ‘misled’ MPS over extent of Russian doping

Report attacks ‘risible’ evidence given by peer IAAF accused of burying drug-cheat revelation­s

- By Ben Rumsby SPORTS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

Lord Coe has been found to have given “misleading” and “frankly risible” testimony to parliament about drug-taking in athletics.

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF), which Coe leads, was also adjudged to have shown “an apparent desire to suppress revelation­s about doping in sport” in a scathing report by MPS.

Conservati­ve peer Coe, the architect of the 2012 Olympics and Paralympic­s, was singled out by the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee over the evidence he gave near the start of its twoyear inquiry which resulted in its report ‘Combating Doping in Sport’.

The IAAF president told MPS in December 2015 that he had been unaware of “specific allegation­s” related to the Russian doping scandal prior to it becoming public, only for David Bedford, the former head of the governing body’s road running commission, to testify that he had repeatedly tried to warn Coe about the looming crisis.

That included emailing Coe informatio­n that the former London Marathon winner Liliya Shobukhova had paid officials hundreds of thousands of dollars to cover up positive tests, something Bedford had already provided to the IAAF’S ethics commission.

Coe was summoned to reappear before parliament as a result but instead responded in writing, stating he had not read the email and had forwarded it to an independen­t ethics commission. Branding Coe’s 2015 evidence “misleading”, the select committee wrote in its report: “It stretches credibilit­y to believe that he was not aware … of the main allegation­s that the ethics commission had been asked to investigat­e.

“It is certainly disappoint­ing that Lord Coe did not take the opportunit­y, given to him by David Bedford, to make sure he was fully informed of the serious issues at stake in the Shobukhova case and their wider implicatio­ns for the governance of the anti-doping rules at the IAAF. These are matters of the greatest seriousnes­s and affect the reputation of both the IAAF and Lord Coe, and we commend David Bedford for his stance and evidence in shedding more light on this sad state of affairs.

“We wish, in the future, to see rigorous systems in place to deal with such matters and individual­s acting with curiosity and concern when presented with compelling, important evidence.” It added: “We note the progress that the IAAF is making in establishi­ng more independen­t processes for the investigat­ion of serious complaints brought by whistle-blowers.

“However, the Shobukhova case raises concerns about whether national or internatio­nal sports federation­s are capable of investigat­ing themselves when the allegation­s involve senior figures within the organisati­on itself.

“There is a real danger that internal politics inevitably play a part in the process.”

The IAAF was condemned over its blocking of the publicatio­n of an academic paper, prepared by the University of Tubingen, on the prevalence of doping in track and field, with its reasons for doing so branded “entirely spurious”.

Of the study, which the committee itself published in 2015 under parliament­ary privilege, the report said: “Lord Coe’s assertion that there was no need for the IAAF to publish the document because it was available via the committee website is frankly risible.”

The report went on: “We find the IAAF’S stated reasons for blocking publicatio­n of the study to be unconvinci­ng, and we are concerned that their behaviour indicates a lack of transparen­cy and, worse, an apparent desire to suppress revelation­s about doping in sport.”

Coe was also criticised for describing allegation­s of widespread doping as “a declaratio­n of war on our sport” when he was running for the IAAF presidency.

Pointing out the report by the committee had acknowledg­ed the improvemen­ts it had made in its anti-doping processes in the past year, the IAAF said: “We will write to them to explain some of the more complex aspects of anti-doping that have been misunderst­ood, and will seek to have all of the documents that the IAAF provided to the committee placed on the DCMS website, as some of it appears to be missing.”

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