Diack
resigns as honorary IOC member: IOC
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[November 11, 2015]
BERLIN (Reuters) - Former world
athletics (IAAF) president Lamine Diack has resigned as honorary member
of the International Olympic Committee following the launch of a formal
investigation against the Senegalese for suspected corruption and
money-laundering, the IOC said on Wednesday.
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Diack, who was provisionally suspended by the IOC on Tuesday and has
also resigned as president of the International Athletics
Foundation, is alleged to have received more than one million euros
($1.07 million) in bribes in 2011 to cover up positive doping tests
of Russian athletes.
The 82-year-old, an IOC member from 1999 to 2013 before becoming an
honorary member a year later, was placed under formal investigation
in France this week and questioned by authorities before being
released on a bail bond of 500,000 euros and banned from leaving the
country.
His resignation from the Olympic body comes two days after the
publication of a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) independent
commission report on allegations of widespread corruption and
collusion by Russian officials, including state security services,
to cover up results of drug tests, destroy samples and intimidate
laboratory staff.
The report also identified "systematic failures" by the IAAF
governing body, already rocked by the probe against Diack and other
officials.
Diack served as president of the IAAF from 1999 until August this
year when he was succeeded by Briton Sebastian Coe. His son Papa
Massata Diack and three others have also been charged with various
alleged breaches of the IAAF's Code of Ethics.
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Diack was a powerful figure within the IOC as he controlled the
flagship sport of the Olympic Games for more than 15 years, with
athletics also a big beneficiary, along with swimming, of the IOC's
Olympic Games financial contributions.
($1 = 0.9308 euros)
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Editing by John O'Brien)
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