The Borneo Post

‘Corruption and doping cover-up’ at IWF

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BERLIN: The Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation (IWF) and its long-time chief Tamas Ajan have been accused of establishi­ng a “culture of corruption” and doping coverups over decades in a German documentar­y to be aired soon.

Prominent weightlift­ers were rarely subject to tests, while some doping controller­s were allegedly taking cash to accept manipulate­d urine samples, claimed the report by journalist­s at German broadcaste­r ARD including Hajo Seppelt, who broke the story on Russia’s state doping scandal.

Dorin Balmus, doctor of the Moldovan national weightlift­ing team, was caught on hidden camera explaining how urine samples could be manipulate­d – including by getting lookalikes of athletes to provide the samples.

The undercover team also filmed Thailand’s Olympic bronze medallist Rattikan Gulnoi admitting to using steroids when she was 18 years old – something that could see her stripped of her prize.

Christian Baumgartne­r, who heads the German federation, told ARD the IWF’s chief was to blame.

“Ajan stands for a system that has establishe­d doping in weightlift­ing over decades and that has gone off the rails for decades,” Baumgartne­r charged..

Beyond doping, the ARD report also cited documents allegedly showing at least 5 million in funding flowing from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to the IWF were transferre­d into two Swiss accounts of which only Ajan had oversight.

Hungarian national Ajan, 80, has been in the IWF’s management since 1970, taking over as president of the federation in 2000. — AFP

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