Daily Mail

COE CAUGHT UP IN NEW DOPING STORM

- By MATT LAWTON Chief Sports Reporter

LORD COE is accused of misleading MPs over athletics’ doping scandal and becoming the most powerful man in the sport with the help of an allegedly corrupt official. After a joint investigat­ion with the BBC’s Panorama, Sportsmail can reveal Coe received an email detailing evidence of serious claims of corruption in August 2014 — four months before they were first broadcast in a German TV documentar­y. The double Olympic champion told the Culture, Media and Sport select committee he was not aware of ‘specific allegation­s’ until December 2014. Text messages have also emerged which suggest disgraced Papa Massata Diack, now banned from track and field for life, helped to secure votes for Coe’s election as president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s last year. Coe denies the allegation­s.

His actions are described by an official as disgusting

LORD COE presents himself as the man who can rebuild ‘ trust’ in athletics after the worst corruption scandal in the history of sport. he is now the president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) — a double Olympic champion who says he is intent on cleaning up his organisati­on as well as his sport.

he says he was as horrified as anyone when it emerged that an extortion racket allegedly being run by senior IAAF officials was allowing drug cheats to compete.

An independen­t investigat­ion ordered by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) concluded last year that these officials ‘sabotaged’ the 2012 Olympic Games which Coe was credited with delivering for London. But Coe has said he did not even begin to understand the extent of the corruption involving Russian athletes until the allegation­s were made public by a German broadcaste­r in December 2014.

This despite serving as vicepresid­ent of the IAAF for seven years prior to becoming the most powerful man in his sport last August.

Today, however, Sportsmail reveals new evidence which questions whether Coe is the right man to lead athletics out of the dark.

Indeed, whether he should be chairing a press conference in Vienna today where it will be announced whether Russia’s track and field stars will be allowed to go to this summer’s Rio Olympics.

One WADA official has described Coe’s actions as ‘digusting’ while a leading MP has claimed Coe misled a parliament­ary select committee.

After an investigat­ion conducted with the BBC’s Panorama, which aired its Seb Coe and the Corruption Scandal programme last night, Sportsmail can reveal that Coe received detailed evidence of serious allegation­s of corruption in athletics four months before they were first broadcast in a German documentar­y.

The BBC has also gathered evidence that strongly suggests Coe turned to Papa Massata Diack, the disgraced former official at the centre of the corruption scandal, to help him win the presidenti­al election. Coe now stands accused of ‘misleading’ a parliament­ary select committee. MP Damian Collins insists his position will be untenable unless he can now provide a ‘robust explanatio­n’ for his comments and his alliance with allegedly corrupt officials. Collins believes Coe may have been ‘compromise­d’ by that alliance.

When, in December 2015, Coe was asked by MP Ian Lucas during the select committee proceeding­s why the IAAF had not tackled the Russian doping scandal sooner when he had ‘such a prominent role in the organisati­on’, Coe replied: ‘We were not aware — I was certainly not aware — of the specific allegation­s that had been made around the corruption of anti-doping processes in Russia.’

When MP Paul Farrelly asked him if he was aware of allegation­s against Papa Massata Diack, Coe replied: ‘They were allegation­s aired in the ARD documentar­y and after that he stepped down.’

During an interview with ITN in November, Coe was asked how he knew so little of what was going on. ‘ The allegation­s that corruption has taken place in our organisati­on are truly shocking,’ he said. ‘And, no, I did not know the basis of those allegation­s.’ he told Channel 4’s Jon Snow: ‘Those allegation­s have come as a shock.’ But Sportsmail can reveal Coe received detailed allegation­s about the corruption as early as August 2014, when he was sent a complaint that concerned Russian Liliya Shobukhova. The former London marathon winner was asked to pay 450,000 euros to officials to conceal her doping offences and allow her to run in the London Olympics.

When Shobukhova was eventually banned for doping offences, a sum of 300,000 euros was repaid to her from an account belonging to Black Tidings. That company in Singapore is controlled by a business associate of Papa Massata Diack, who is also now the focus of a criminal investigat­ion by the French financial authoritie­s.

evidence seen by Sportsmail and the BBC confirms that in August 2014 Coe received a copy of the Shobukhova complaint via email to his official IAAF address, which also directly implicated Papa Massata Diack.

The email — seen by the Sportsmail and the BBC — contained the complaint that was written in April 2014 by Andrey Baranov, the agent of Shubokhova, with the assistance of the IAAF distance running official, Sean Wallace- Jones.

The complaint had been submitted to the IAAF ethics commission with the help of London Marathon boss David Bedford. But, publicly, the IAAF said nothing.

Four months later, in August 2014, Bedford decided to bring it to the attention of the one man in the IAAF he felt he could trust. he emailed the complaint to the then vice-president, Lord Coe.

Sportsmail and the BBC have seen the complaint and it details the corruption, extortion and bribery allegation­s as well as the suggestion that Papa Massata Diack, the son of the then president Lamine Diack, was directly implicated.

MP Collins said: ‘On the evidence about doping in Russia, I think this is really significan­t informatio­n — that he (Coe) was sent the detailed allegation­s four months before the evidence became public and yet denied any knowledge. To the select committee he made it clear he had no specific knowledge of the allegation­s. That clearly wasn’t true. his response was misleading to the select committee.’

A spokeswoma­n for Coe came back with a response that was anything but robust. Despite the explosive nature of the email and the fact Coe employed two personal assistants to monitor all correspond­ence, he did not open the attachment­s to read the contents.

‘Seb does not even have a computer,’ insisted the spokeswoma­n. ‘ The only thing you can accuse him of is a lack of curiosity.’ This is the same Seb Coe who chaired the FIFA ethics commission and saw nothing untoward there, either.

A statement issued by Coe’s

spokeswoma­n said: ‘ The (IAAF) ethics commission (as it then was) was deliberate­ly establishe­d as a quasi-judicial body to investigat­e all allegation­s of corruption and breaches of the IAAF rules. It is independen­t of the IAAF.

‘Seb Coe was forwarded a number of emails and informatio­n regarding allegation­s of corruption and concerning the behaviour of certain individual­s.

‘All of this material was sent by him to the ethics commission whose remit is to investigat­e such matters and then to pass judgement. Seb Coe was subsequent­ly contacted by the ethics commission to say they were already aware of the allegation­s and the matters were all being actively investigat­ed and he therefore left them to do so.

‘Seb has never denied hearing rumours about corruption. In fact he has said on many occasions that when alerted to rumours he asked people to pass them to the ethics commission to be investigat­ed.

‘He did receive an email from Dave Bedford that said, “The attachment­s relate to an issue that is being investigat­ed by the IAAF EC (Michael Beloff)”. This was enough for Seb Coe to forward the email to the ethics commission. He did not feel it was necessary to read the attachment­s.

‘You may think this shows a lack of curiosity. He, and we, would argue that it shows a full duty of care. Ensuring the right people in the right place were aware of allegation­s and were investigat­ing them.’

 ?? AFP ?? London’s problem: Shobukhova
AFP London’s problem: Shobukhova
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 ?? AP ?? Denials: Coe speaks out as president of the IAAF during a conference
AP Denials: Coe speaks out as president of the IAAF during a conference
 ??  ?? Up close: Coe poses with Papa Massata Diack (left)
Up close: Coe poses with Papa Massata Diack (left)
 ?? AP ?? All smiles: Coe (right) with the departing Lamine Diack
AP All smiles: Coe (right) with the departing Lamine Diack
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