Tuesday 02, Sep 2008
IOC takes firmer stance on Greek team’s steroid controversy
Posted Byi steroids
So that the world of sports would know that the International Olympic Committee means business when it comes to cleaning up the Games of wayward athletes and coaches, it has taken a special interest on the steroid scandal involving yet another Greek athlete.
The IOC has filed a lawsuit against George Panagiotopoulos, coach of former Olympic champion hurdler Fani Halkia. Halkia was one of the six athletes who were disqualified from the Beijing Olympics because of doping violation.
According to IOC’s lawyer Petros Mahas, the organization had already provided its evidence to prosecutors in Greece to bring charges against Panagiotopoulos relating to the country’s anti-doping laws.
“We submitted the lawsuit against Mr Panagiotopoulos and any other responsible parties,” Mahas said. “The IOC’s target is not the athletes, but the coaches who supply them with drugs.”
The 29-year-old Halkia tested for the anabolic steroid methyltrienolone in early August before she headed for Beijing. She could receive a two-year ban from the sport.
And here’s the staggering statistics courtesy of the Greek Olympic team – 19 athletes, including Halkia, had tested positive for banned compounds before and during the Games.
In March, eleven of the 14 Greek weightlifters tested positive also for methyltrienolone in an out-of-competition screening in Athens. If this is not systematic doping, we don’t know what is.
Because of this embarrassing incident the International Weightlifting Federation had reportedly fined the Greek weightlifting federation amounting to $387,000.
Consequently, a Greek prosecutor had filed misdemeanor charges against the eleven athletes, team coach Christos Iakovou and 13 other individuals involved in the doping incident.
Thus, the IOC is now particularly critical of Greek anti-doping programs.
“The IOC wants to actively participate in the fight against doping in Greece,” Mahas added. “It is the first time the IOC requests a country’s legal authorities to investigate the criminal accountability of a trainer who doped athletes.”
From Reuters:
Halkia, an officer in the Greek airforce, has insisted her sample was tampered with. If investigating magistrates find Greek doping laws were violated, she and others could also face criminal charges.
Another of Panagiotopoulos’s runners, sprinter Dimitris Regas, was caught doping weeks before the Beijing Games.
After losing 11 weightlifters, sprinters, a rower and a swimmer due to positive drugs tests in the run-up to the Game, the hosts of the previous Olympics had more athletes banned from than medals won, two silvers and two bronze.
The case brought back bitter memories for the country, still embarrassed that its top two sprinters Katerina Thanou and Costas Kenteris were expelled from the 2004 Olympics after missing a doping test on the eve of the Games.
Tags: doping incident, Fani Halkia, George Panagiotopoulos, Greek Olympic team doping, Greek weightlifting team, methytrienolone, steroids
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