|
THE International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) said Sunday its ethics commission will investigate corruption allegations against a member of its decision-making council from Kenya, a country already under scrutiny for its doping record.
The IAAF had alerted its ethics commission to the allegations made by British newspaper The Sunday Times, a spokesman for the world athletics body said in an email. Council member David Okeyo is accused along with two other senior Kenyan athletics officials of taking nearly US$700,000 given to their national federation by sponsor Nike.
Okeyo, who is also a vice president of Kenya’s athletics federation, is under investigation in Kenya alongside Athletics Kenya President Isaiah Kiplagat and Joseph Kinyua, the federation’s former treasurer.
In a report that threatens to unleash another damaging scandal for the IAAF, The Sunday Times said the three took most of the money in cash from the federation’s accounts. Kiplagat is a former IAAF council member and was a candidate for an IAAF vice president post in elections in August.
He lost out in a vote. Okeyo took his place on the IAAF council.
“The IAAF was not aware of the investigation into Mr. Okeyo in Kenya and the information has immediately been passed on to the independent IAAF Ethics Commission,” the IAAF spokesman said in his email.
Okeyo is a member of the IAAF’s governing council that voted Friday to suspend Russia from international competition over allegations contained in a World Anti-Doping Agency report that the country engineered a state-sponsored program to cover up doping by its athletes. That report followed the revelation that former IAAF president Lamine Diack was under criminal investigation in France, suspected of taking bribes to cover up Russian doping tests.
Kenyan athletics is already under pressure following a surge in doping cases among its distance runners and accusations the federation has not done enough to combat it, or worse still might be complicit in concealing it.(SD-Agencies)
|