Athletics' governing body,
International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), suppressed a study
which showed as many as a third of the world's top athletes admitted violating
anti-doping rules, according to the Sunday Times. The
University of Tubingen in Germany is reported to have said the IAAF blocked
publication. Hundreds of athletes
apparently told researchers in 2011 they had cheated. The IAAF said discussions
were ongoing about the report's publication.
BBC report continues:
In a statement to the newspaper, the university said: "The study is
an independently initiated scientific research project and was not commissioned
by the IAAF.
"The IAAF's delaying publication for so long without good reason is
a serious encroachment on the freedom of publication."
The governing body responded: "Discussions are ongoing with the
research team and Wada [the World Anti-Doping Agency - the other partner in the
project] regarding publication of the study."
Four years ago, a team of academic researchers interviewed hundreds of
athletes at the World Championships in Daegu, South Korea.
The Sunday Times reports the study concluded that 29%-34% of the 1,800
competitors at the championships had violated anti-doping rules in the previous
12 months.
It says that a month after collecting the information, the researchers
were told to sign a confidentiality agreement to prevent them speaking out
about the admissions.
A leaked copy of the full study has been seen by The Sunday Times and
the German broadcaster ARD/WDR.
"These findings demonstrate that doping is remarkably widespread
among elite athletes, and remains largely unchecked despite current biological
testing programs," it concludes.
The findings are similar to the newspaper's revelations a fortnight ago
after it obtained access to the results of 12,000 blood tests from 5,000
athletes.
Two leading anti-doping experts found that, between 2001 and 2012, a
third of medals, including 55 golds, were won in endurance events in the
Olympics and World Championships by athletes who have recorded suspicious
tests.
The IAAF said their findings contained a number of seriously inaccurate
assertions.
The German university's study was reportedly financed with £50,000 from
Wada to find out the extent of the use of performance enhancing drugs and
methods in athletics. It was put together by 10 academics, including two from British
universities.
Although the IAAF played no role in the study, it had the power to veto
its publication by Wada in return for allowing access to the competitors at
Daegu.
Some of the study's headline figures did appear in The New York Times
two years ago but the IAAF has prevented publication of the study, according to
the Sunday Times.
The Sunday Times reports that the study concluded that 29%-34% of the
1,800 competitors at Daegu 2011 had used performance-enhancing drugs in the
previous 12 months
Lead author, Dr Rolf Ulrich from the University of Tubingen, told The
Sunday Times he and his fellow experts had been barred from discussing their
work.
Asked why the study had never been published, he replied: "It's
because the IAAF is blocking it. I think they are stakeholders with Wada and
they just blocked the whole thing."
A WADA spokesman said: "WADA sought the agreement of the IAAF to
carry out the project at the Daegu World Championships in 2011.
"Their consent was
given so that researchers had access to athletes at the event, and was
conditional upon any publication first being approved by the IAAF. The IAAF has
not approved the publication of the project."
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