Two Kenyan athletes suspended for
doping: AIU
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[July 10, 2019]
By Isaack Omulo
NAIROBI (Reuters) - The Athletics
Integrity Unit (AIU) said on Tuesday it had provisionally suspended
two Kenyan athletes, one of them a Commonwealth Games former
champion, for doping, the latest in a string of doping cases in the
East African nation.
The AIU said in a statement on its website it had suspended Joyce
Chepkirui, the 2014 Commonwealth Games and Africa 10,000 meters
champion, for discrepancy in her Athlete Biological Passport (ABP).
The AIU, which handles integrity and doping issues for the
International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), said it
had also suspended Jacob Kibet Kendagor, who in 2017 came second in
the Hamburg and Istanbul Marathons and was fifth in Istanbul last
year.
Kendagor was reprimanded for "evading, refusing or failing to submit
to sample collection".
Kenya was among the countries placed on World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA's)
compliance watch list in 2016.
In July 2018, Kenyan athletes were among those required to have at
least three out-of-competition doping tests in the 10 months before
a world championships or Olympics under tougher new anti-doping
rules by the IAAF.
Athletics Kenya passed a resolution in April that any athlete who
was sanctioned for abusing banned substances would not be allowed to
represent the country even after serving IAAF suspensions.
[to top of second column] |
Joyce Chepkirui of Kenya takes first place ahead of compatriot
Florence Kiplagat in the Women's 10000m final at the Commonwealth
Games in Glasgow, Scotland, July 29, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Young/File
Photo
About 60 have been sanctioned for anti-doping rule violations in the
past five years.
Among them are former Boston and Chicago Marathon winner Rita Jeptoo,
2016 Olympics marathon winner Jemima Sumgong and 2008 Beijing
Olympics and three-times 1,500m world champion Asbel Kiprop, who has
repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.
In May, Kenyan-born Bahrain Olympic women's marathon silver
medallist Eunice Kirwa was also provisionally suspended after
failing a doping test.
In June, marathon runner Felix Kirwa was suspended for nine months
after testing positive for strychnine.
"All dopers must be smoked out until the sport is clean. There is no
other solution … there is no alternative to running clean," Barnabas
Korir, Athletics Kenya (AK) Executive Committee member, told
Reuters.
(Editing by George Obulutsa and Clare Lovell)
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