Gulf Times - Gulf Times Sport

Diack junior denies Russian doping graft

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Papa Massata Diack, the son of former world athletics supremo Lamine Diack, has denied corruption linked to the Russian doping scandal, saying he is too rich to bribe.

Diack has been indicted by French prosecutor­s for allegedly accepting millions of dollars along with his father, Lamine Diack, in return for covering up positive Russian doping tests.

Diack junior is a former marketing consultant for the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF), now renamed World Athletics, which was run by his father from 1999 to 2015.

He was due to go on trial in Paris from mid-January along with his father but has refused to co-operate with French authoritie­s and remains in Senegal. Despite two internatio­nal arrest warrants issued by France, the Senegalese authoritie­s have said they will not extradite Diack junior. In testimony to an investigat­ing magistrate in Senegal in November, seen by AFP, Papa Massata Diack said he was too wealthy to need to take bribes and denied covering up positive Russian doping tests from 2011. “In all the years I worked with the IAAF and Dentsu-AMS (the IAAF marketing rights holders),

I earned around 10 millions dollars (nine mn euros) from sponsoring contracts and TV rights,” he testified.

“So I had no need to ask athletes to pay money for doping cases.”

The testimony, given on November 7, was sent by Senegal authoritie­s to Paris along with other documents related to the case, but arrived too late to permit the trial to go ahead on the original date.

The presiding magistrate in the trial said more time was needed to examine that testimony. The trial is now set to start in June. In his testimony, Diack, 54, denied all allegation­s against him including taking unauthoris­ed payments to the tune of millions of dollars for TV contracts.

Separately, father and son are also being investigat­ed by French authoritie­s in a related case concerning the allocation of major athletics events and two Olympic Games.

Diack senior, 86, acknowledg­ed during the investigat­ion over Russian doping that sanctions against Russian athletes had been put on hold to allow them to compete at the 2012 London Olympics and the 2013 world athletics championsh­ips in Moscow.

Russia has been suspended from internatio­nal competitio­n since 2015 after proof emerged of a vast statebacke­d doping conspiracy.

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