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Lamine Diack (R) arrived at a Paris court on Monday © AFP / Thomas SAMSON

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Diack told top doping official to avoid ‘a scandal’, court hears

Lamine Diack (R) was head of athletics’ world governing body for 16 years © AFP / Thomas SAMSON

Paris, France, Jun 8 – The former anti-doping chief of athletics’ world governing body told a French court Monday that Lamine Diack urged him to bend the rules on Russian doping cases to avoid “a scandal” that would scare off sponsors.

Gabriel Dolle is being tried in Paris alongside Diack, the Senegalese former president of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), who is accused of accepting millions of dollars to cover up Russian doping tests.

Dolle, a 78-year-old Frenchman, is himself charged with “receiving bribes” amounting to 190,000 euros between 2013 and 2014.

He told the trial he had been trying to find a compromise between the “higher interest” of the IAAF, since renamed World Athletics, and doping suspicions surrounding Russian athletes.

In late 2011 and early 2012, the IAAF drew up a list of 23 Russian athletes whose anti-doping tests gave cause for concern.

Dolle said Diack “asked me to consider… the critical financial situation” of the IAAF.

“With the list… it was going to cause a scandal which could have influenced negotiations with sponsors and put them in jeopardy,” Dolle told the court.

Dolle said he was “trying not to provoke a scandal” and the man who considered himself to be a “hardliner” insisted he had never avoided handing down punishments for doping offenders.

When the judge in the trial, Marie-Rose Hunault, pointed out that some of the names on the list who were allowed to continue competing not only went on to take part in the 2012 London Olympics, but won medals, Dolle said he had been “betrayed”.

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Former anti-doping official Gabriel Dolle (L) is accused of “receiving bribes” totalling 190,000 euros © AFP / Thomas SAMSON

“I was slightly a hostage to a commitment I had given my president,” Dolle said, referring to Diack.

– ‘Bonus’ –

Asked about the payments he is accused of receiving, Dolle said he believed 50,000 euros he was given in an envelope by Diack’s son Papa Massata Diack, a marketing consultant for the IAAF, was a “bonus” for his handling of the Russian doping cases.

He said the 90,000 euros that Lamine Diack gave him in two payments in 2013 and 2014 was compensation for being “sacked in a brutal and ungrateful way”.

Diack, who was in charge of the IAAF between 1999 and 2015, will give evidence when the trial resumes on Wednesday.

The 87-year-old is charged with “giving and receiving bribes”, “breach of trust” and “organised money laundering”.

The prosecution alleges that Diack obtained $1.5 million of Russian funds to help back Macky Sall’s campaign for the 2012 Senegal presidential election — which he won — in exchange for the IAAF’s anti-doping arm covering up or delaying offences by 23 Russians.

The aim, prosecutors say, was to allow the Russian athletes to compete in the 2012 Olympics and the World Athletics Championships in Moscow the following year.

The trial, following a four-year French investigation, was originally scheduled to start on January 13 but was delayed to examine new evidence.

The charges against Lamine Diack carry a maximum sentence of 10 years’ prison.

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Also appearing in court is Habib Cisse, Diack’s former legal advisor, who is suspected of having acted as an intermediary between the IAAF and Russian athletics authorities and having received hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Missing from the trial, however, will be Papa Massata Diack, who handled lucrative contracts for the IAAF.

Diack senior’s son was implicated through a payment of 450,000 euros from Russian runner Liliya Shobukhova, allegedly to have her blood passport case delayed in order to compete in the 2012 Olympic marathon, as revealed by German broadcaster ARD in 2014.

Diack junior is accused of playing a “central role” in the network of corruption and is charged with “money laundering”, “giving bribes” and “aiding the receiving of bribes”.

Despite two international arrest warrants issued by France, the Senegalese authorities have refused to extradite him.

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