The Scotsman

Kenyan athletics boss agreed to give dope test tip-offs for cash

● Olympic chief ’s ten-year ban latest scandal for sport in East African nation

- By MATT SLATER

The boss of the Kenyan athletics team at Rio 2016 has been banned for ten years by world athletics’ governing body the IAAF for agreeing to tip off athletes and coaches about drug tests in exchange for cash.

Major Michael Rotich has been suspended since August 2016, when he was sent home from the Rio Olympics in disgrace following the publicatio­n of a joint investigat­ion by German broadcaste­r ARD and The Sunday Times newspaper.

As par t of the undercover sting, repor ters posed as the coach and manager of a fictional group of British athletes who wanted to train and dope in Kenya.

Rotich, who was also Athletics Kenya’s most senior member of staff in the Nor th Rift Province that is home to most of the east African countr y’s best runners, was caught on camera promising the reporters he would warn them when drug-testers were in the area to give the athletes time to flush the drugs from their system.

O ve r t h e c o u r s e o f t h r e e meetings in January and Februar y of 2016, Rotich told the reporters he knew the British couple who conducted tests in the region “very well” and it was “very reasonable” to think that he could give the athletes at least 12 hours’ notice.

When asked by the repor ters if a three-month lump payment of £9,000 would “suit” him, Rotich said: “That would be fine. I’ve no problem. Even 10 [thousand]. It would b e a round figure.”

After more than t wo years of stalling by Rotich, during which time he “retired” from Athletics Kenya, he was formally charged with corrup - tion and bringing the sp or t into disrepute by the IAAF’S ethics board in February 2019.

Having previously told the IAAF he only went along with the reporters because he was conducting his own investigat­ions into doping in Kenya, Rotich offered no new evidence to the ethics board panel and it unanimousl­y dismissed his explanatio­n.

In a 13-page ruling, the threestron­g panel said it did not find his stor y “plausible” and the “p u r p o s e o f t h e a g r e e men t was plain: it was to assist those athletes to flush their systems of banned substances before taking doping tests”.

Describing the charges as “serious”, the panel found that Rotich’s conduct was “dishonest and corrupt” but said there was no evidence he “did in fact provide advance notice of doping tests to specific athletes, nor that any payments actually changed hands”.

Despite this, the panel had no reservatio­ns about imposi n g a t e n - y e a r b a n o n R o tich and ordering him to pay the IAAF a fine of US dollars 5,000 (£3,950) and more than £11,000 in legal costs.

The decision comes the day after Bahrain’s Kenyan-born Eunice Kirwa – the silver medallist for the women’s marathon in Rio – was provisiona­lly suspended for testing positive for the blo o d-b o osting drug EPO.

The winner of that race, Kenya’s Je mi ma S u mg o n g , h a s already been given an eightyear ban for using EPO, but b oth are likely to keep their Olympic medals as their positive tests came after 2016.

Kenya won 13 athletics medals in Rio, including six golds, but more than 50 Kenyan runners have been sanctioned for doping in the last five years.

 ??  ?? 0 Kenya Olympics athletic team manager Michael Rotich attends the Milimani Court in Nairobi.
0 Kenya Olympics athletic team manager Michael Rotich attends the Milimani Court in Nairobi.

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