LONDON: The IAAF said it “fully acknowledges and accepts the extreme gravity” of the findings of the WADA independent commission on Thursday after athletics’ governing body was hammered for weak governance that allowed widespread corruption at the top.
The International Athletics Federation (IAAF) said in a statement that the weakness of its governance “had allowed individuals at the head of the previous regime to delay the following of normal procedures in certain doping cases”.
It said that the commission’s recommendations, in the report, to strengthen IAAF governance would be incorporated “into the root and branch review which was begun by IAAF president Sebastian Coe immediately he came into office”.
The WADA commission exposed the corrupt regime of former president Lamine Diack and said knowledge of it must have been widespread among senior figures of the Monaco-based federation.
Coe accepted that the organisation’s Council, of which he was a long-standing member, should have been aware of the corruption and told Reuters he would introduce reforms to ensure there would be no repeat.
“I will put systems in place for the current council and so that my successor is never in a position that we don’t understand the nature of the day-to-day running of the organisation,” Coe said after Pound had said he felt the Briton was the right man to lead the IAAF.
“We cannot change the past, but I am determined that we will learn from it and will not repeat its mistakes,” he added.