The director of International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) president Sebastian Coe’s office on Tuesday temporarily stepped down pending an ethics investigation into e-mails linked to Russian doping cases.
E-mails sent by Nick Davies, leaked to a French newspaper and published this week, indicated that he tried to delay public identification of alleged Russian drug cheats before the 2013 world championships in Moscow.
“I have decided to step aside from my role with the IAAF until such time as the ethics board is able to review the matter properly and decide if I am responsible for any breach of the IAAF code of ethics,” Davies said in a statement.
Photo: AFP
Davies was IAAF communications director at the time under Lamine Diack, who was succeeded by Coe as president in August. A French criminal case against Diack deepened this week, with magistrates filing new, tougher corruption charges against him in connection with cover-ups of Russian doping.
French prosecutors also suspect Diack’s son, Papa Massata Diack, a former IAAF marketing consultant, played an active role in an alleged “system of corruption” that sought to blackmail athletes, with demands of money to hush up suspected doping.
Davies is reported to have sent an e-mail to Papa Massata Diack in 2013 asking what “Russian ‘skeletons’ we have still in the cupboard regarding doping” and suggesting the use of a marketing company chaired by Coe — then IAAF vice president — to lead an “unofficial PR [public relations] campaign” to “avoid international media scandals” related to the Moscow championships.
If Russian athletes guilty of doping were not competing in Moscow, “then we might as well wait until the event is over to announce them,” Davies wrote in the e-mail, which was published on Monday by Le Monde.
After promoting Davies to run his office at the IAAF in September, Coe is now losing one of his closest aides just as he tries to clean up the scandal-tainted governing body.
“In order to demonstrate that I am willing to have all allegations of unethical behavior on my part in 2013 properly and fairly investigated, I have referred my e-mails to Papa Massata Diack in 2013, my statements and the circumstances of the e-mails to the IAAF ethics board,” Davies said in Tuesday’s statement.
Davies has suggested that e-mails reflected his job “to manage and promote the reputation of the IAAF.”
“What has become apparent today is that I have become the story,” he said. “This is not helpful at the current time, with ongoing criminal investigations by the French police, the IAAF’s ethics board or WADA [World Anti-Doping Agency] — all of whom I have voluntarily offered full assistance to and will continue to do so.”
The All-Russia Athletic Federation was suspended by the IAAF after a WADA independent commission found evidence of systemic doping and cover-ups.
Lamine Diack is now accused of “active corruption,” which generally involves offering money or other promises in exchange for violating a rule, an official with the Paris financial prosecutor’s office said on Tuesday.
Lamine Diack was previously accused of “passive corruption,” on suspicion he took about 1 million euros (US$1.1 million) to cover up positive drug tests by Russian athletes.
The official told The Associated Press the new preliminary charges center on suspicions that Lamine Diack bribed Gabriel Dolle, the former IAAF anti-doping chief who was also under investigation, to delay reporting of violations by Russian athletes.
The official was not authorized to be publicly named while speaking about an ongoing investigation.
The preliminary charges allow magistrates more time to investigate before deciding whether to file formal charges and whether to send a case to trial. Lamine Diack, an 82-year-old former long jumper, is free on bail pending further investigation, but barred from leaving France.
Papa Massata Diack told the BBC his father was in “good spirits,” despite the investigation.
“Suddenly, they are just going to destroy all he’s built over the last 16 years and all the 39 years he’s spent in the IAAF, so I find it very sad, and I could not recognize certain acts or certain declarations made by certain people,” he was quoted as saying from Senegal.
The younger Diack on Tuesday denied any involvement in bribery or corruption and refuted claims he helped finance Senegalese President Macky Sall’s election campaign in 2012.
Papa Massata Diack said he was ready to “give evidence, but in Senegal.”
“I’m in Senegal, where it’s [possible] to send a letter of request. I’m a Senegalese citizen, but not a French citizen,” Papa Massata Diack said in an interview with Senegalese radio station RFM.
“I’m absolutely calm. After the investigation, lots of surprises are going to be revealed,” he said. “People wanted to say we covered up doping cases in exchange for secret payments. I never took part in financing [Senegalese political] rivals, in distributing money to them.”
“I never received any money from the hands of Valentin Balakhnishev,” he added, referring to a former All-Russia Athletic Federation president.
Lamine Diack was quoted by Le Monde as saying that Balakhnishev, also an ex-IAAF treasurer, had made the payments to help Sall’s campaign.
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