Malta Independent

IOC denies covering up 2008 Olympic doping cases

-

The IOC denied yesterday that it covered up doping cases from the 2008 Beijing Olympics after a German TV programme revealed that positive tests by Jamaican sprinters were not prosecuted.

German documentar­y maker Hajo Seppelt said “several” of the Caribbean island’s athletes had traces of clenbutero­l, a banned muscle-building substance, in recent re-tests of 8-year-old urine samples.

No athletes were identified. Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt won three gold medals in world-record times and was the star of the Beijing Games.

The IOC said yesterday it concluded there was no pattern of organised cheating, after consulting the World Anti-Doping Agency.

“After careful considerat­ion, WADA informed the IOC further to the pattern analysis that the IOC had conducted that WADA could not find any significan­t and consis- tent pattern of abuse of clenbutero­l in these cases and that it would be appropriat­e not to take these cases any further,” the IOC said in a statement.

The low levels of clenbutero­l found, “below 1ng/ml,” was in the range to suggest “potential meat contaminat­ion cases,” the IOC said.

China has a reputation for using clenbutero­l in livestock farming to increase animals’ muscle, and Olympic athletes were warned of contaminat­ion risks before going to Beijing.

Without naming Jamaica, the IOC said the number of clenbutero­l cases in the re-tests was widespread.

“During the re-analysis of the stored urine samples from the Olympic Games Beijing 2008, the laboratory found in a number of cases of athletes from a number of countries and from a number of different sports, very low levels of clenbutero­l,” the IOC said in a statement.

The World Anti-Doping Agency cited a legal precedent when FIFA did not prosecute more than 100 positive tests for clenbutero­l among players at the Under-17 World Cup in 2011 in Mexico, which also has a reputation for using the drug in farming.

“We acknowledg­e that the clenbutero­l meat contaminat­ion issue is unsatisfac­tory,” WADA director general Olivier Niggli said in a WADA statement. “We will continue to invest in scientific research to try to solve this issue as quickly as possible.”

Seppelt and German network ARD have consistent­ly revealed and reported on doping scandals, including working with whistleblo­wers to expose systematic cheating in Russian track and field.

Clenbutero­l is best known as the substance that cost Spanish cyclist Alberto Contador the 2010 Tour de France title. Contador claimed his positive test was caused by contaminat­ed beef brought to France from Spain. A Court for Arbitratio­n for Sport panel judged that he did not intend to dope, and had ingested a contaminat­ed supplement. Contador served a two-year ban and was stripped of the 2010 Tour win.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta