Kenya's athletics body said on Sunday that media
reports alleging doping among its runners were a smear campaign ahead of world
championships in Beijing.
Britain's Sunday Times newspaper and German
broadcaster ARD/WDR said they were given access to the results of more than
12,000 blood tests showing more than 800 athletes had given blood samples that
were "highly suggestive" of doping or "abnormal". Of the
800, 77 were Kenyan athletes according the reports.
ARD/WDR on Saturday aired a documentary in which a
hidden camera purportedly showed athletes being injected with performance
enhancing drugs. ARD also alleged corruption among Kenyan officials who wanted
to cover up doping by runners.
According to the Sunday Times, 18 of the country's
medals won from 2001-2012 were won by athletes with suspicious blood-test
results.
Athletics Kenya (AK) said claims of widespread
systematic doping among Kenyan runners was "suspect and
ill-motivated".
"We cannot fail to point out that the documentary
is an attempt to smear our runners with unwarranted suspicion as they prepare
to undertake duty for their country in Beijing, China," AK said in a
statement.
"The unwarranted claims on the Kenyan athletes
are deliberately aimed at derailing the preparations and the participation of
the Kenyan team in the World Championships."
The championships run Aug. 22-30.
TRACK RECORD
Kenya boasts some of the world's best middle- and
long-distance runners but dozens of its athletes have failed drug tests over
the past few years, casting a shadow over the success of Kenyan athletics.
In February, Rita Jeptoo, winner of the Boston and
Chicago marathons, was banned for two years after a failed test in the biggest
doping scandal to hit Kenya in recent years.
David Rudisha, 800m Olympic champion and Kenya's best
known runner, in December told Reuters that AK should have done more to root
out drugs cheats as persistent doping claims risk tarnishing reputations of
clean Kenyan runners.
Kenyan government officials have blamed the growing
number of doping cases on foreign agents and AK's failure to educate its
athletes properly.
AK said it has been fighting hard to combat doping and
was working closely with IAAF, the World Anti-Doping Agency and the Kenyan
government to counter the scourge.
The Kenyan sports body also said it had been educating
athletes about the dangers posed by doping and was about to conclude an
investigation, assisted by police, into the sale, distribution and use of
banned substances (REUTERS)
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