
“There is no cover up here,”
Coe, who was a vice president of the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF) for seven years before becoming president
in August, told CNN in an interview on Wednesday.
The
athletics chief, in a separate interview with Sky News, also denied
knowledge of IAAF officials discussing Russian doping problems as early
as 2009 and of internal IAAF notes obtained by the Associated Press
proposing some Russian dopers be sanctioned while other, less well-known
athletes be allowed to disappear from the sport unpunished.
The
documents showed that Pierre Weiss, then the IAAF general secretary,
indicated in exchanges with former Russian athletics president Valentin
Balakhnichev, who has been banned from the sport for life, serious
concerns over doping problems in Russia.
“I wasn’t across any
letters or internal communications that were emanating, but the overall
principle has to be if there were abnormal readings were they followed
up? They were. Were sanctions followed up? Yes, they were,” Coe told Sky
News.
He was speaking a day before the IAAF is expected to be
heavily criticised in part two of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA)
independent commission report into the issue.
“I don’t think
it was a huge surprise that we were concerned about Russia,” said Coe,
sporting a new bearded look. “The escalating number of positive tests
that the IAAF Council commented on during my time was clearly a concern.
“But
the issue is simple: Were all abnormal readings followed up? The answer
is yes. Were sanctions imposed and made public? Yes, was there a
cover-up? No.
“There is a difference between cover-up and
failure to hold to account. The changes I am making around the
independent integrity unit are intended to address those issues, to
ensure walls to those in power are lower and that there is more
accountability, including for me.”
The sport has already been
tossed into turmoil by the first WADA report and French authorities
placing former IAAF president Lamine Diack under formal investigation on
suspicion of corruption and money laundering.
Diack’s son
Papa and two Russian officials last week were banned from the sport for
life by an IAAF ethics board for covering up an elite Russian athlete’s
positive dope test and blackmailing her over it.
French
prosecutors are investigating Diack, his son, as well as the former head
of anti-doping Gabriel Dolle and Diack’s lawyer on suspicion of
corruption and will also give an update on their investigation on
Thursday following the WADA commission news conference.
Accusations
of systematic, state-sponsored doping and related corruption in Russia
were detailed in an initial report by the WADA commission, leading to
the IAAF banning the Russian athletics federation from the sport.
The
chairman of the independent commission, Dick Pound, has said Coe and
fellow IAAF vice president Sergey Bubka could have done more to push for
reforms at the federation.
“They had an opportunity a long
time ago to address issues of governance,” Pound said in an interview
with Britain’s Times newspaper.
source citifmonline
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