National Post

IAAF ‘consumed’ by corruption, probe alleges

- John Leicester

MUNICH • Track and field’s governing body was corrupted from the inside by a “powerful rogue group” led by its president, and they conspired to extort athletes and allow doping Russians to continue competing, a World Anti-Doping Agency probe reported Thursday.

Other IAAF leaders were at fault too, the WADA panel’s damning report said. They must have known of the nepotism that allowed Lamine Diack to turn the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s into a personal fiefdom during his 16- year reign as president, it said.

“It is increasing­ly clear that far more IAAF staff knew about the problems than has currently been acknowledg­ed,” said the report, written by former WADA president Dick Pound and presented at a news conference in Munich.

A key question raised by the report is whether alleged corruption under Diack went beyond extorting doped athletes and infected other areas of IAAF business. WADA’s investigat­ors called for a detailed followup probe of all world championsh­ips awarded by the ruling body for 2009-19, due to evidence they found of possible wrongdoing. That included an indication that Diack, a former IOC member, was prepared to sell his vote in the 2020 Olympic hosting contest won by Tokyo in exchange for sponsorshi­p of IAAF events.

The report made further uncomforta­ble reading for Sebastian Coe, the British middle- distance running great who took over from Diack in August. Coe was in the audience as Pound sifted through the grim findings and asserted the IAAF remains an organizati­on in denial.

“The corruption was embedded in the organizati­on. It cannot be ignored or dismissed as attributab­le to the odd renegade acting on its own,” the report said.

Coe is not accused of corrupt wrongdoing. But, as a vice- president under Diack, he was part of the council that serves as the IAAF’s oversight body. That council “could not have been unaware of the extent of doping” and the breaking of anti-doping rules and “could not have been unaware of the level of nepotism” under Diack, the report said.

“It is not credible that elected officials were unaware of the situation affecting … athletics in Russia. If, therefore, the circle of knowledge was so extensive, why was nothing done? Quite obviously there was no appetite on the part of the IAAF to challenge Russia.”

With a “close inner circle” including two of his sons, Papa Massata and Khalil, and his personal legal counsel, Habib Cisse, Diack led an “informal illegitima­te” government that took over the handling of Russian doping cases, opening the door for athletes to then be blackmaile­d, the report said.

Diack “was responsibl­e for organizing and enabling the conspiracy and corruption that took place,” the report said. “He sanctioned and appears to have had personal knowledge of the fraud and the extortion of athletes.”

Installing Diack’s sons as IAAF consultant­s “helped to conceal their clandestin­e corruption,” it added.

Diack also “inserted” his lawyer, Cisse, “into the dayto-day operations” of the antidoping department’s work on Russia. That gave the lawyer access to sensitive informatio­n about which Russian athletes were suspected of doping, based on their blood testing results.

That informatio­n became “the fundamenta­l building block for the corruption and conspiracy that subsequent­ly consumed the IAAF,” the report said.

A contrite Coe later thanked Pound for the hardhittin­g findings.

“The whole sorry saga is about coverup,” Coe said. The WADA probe’s findings, he added, will help the IAAF with the “very complex, deeply painful process” of recovering.

CORRUPTION WAS EMBEDDED IN THE ORGANIZATI­ON.

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