THE IRISH TIMES
Monday, October 8, 2001




British government ministers offered to pay for scholarships for athletes
from developing nations and to take the wives of senior officials on a
shopping trip to top London department store Harrod's if the world athletics
governing body would allow them to switch the 2005 World Championships to
Sheffield, a senior IAAF official said yesterday.

The senior source in the International Association of Athletics Federations
(IAAF) said: "It was as if they were trying to buy us." Another official who
attended the meeting, but who also asked to remain anonymous, said: "It
smacked of crass colonialism."

A spokesman for Britain's Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS)
later confirmed scholarships had been discussed at the meeting. He said it
was also suggested the IAAF might stage its 2005 congress meeting in London,
including a reception hosted by Prime Minister Tony Blair at number 10
Downing Street, "to enjoy the benefits of being in the capital".

The spokesman confirmed that shopping at Harrod's was mentioned, but
stressed there had never been any offers by government officials to pay for
any items purchased.

The IAAF had awarded its 2005 World Championships to London. But on Friday,
the British culture minister, Tessa Jowell, announced London would be
withdrawn because of concerns over the spiralling price of building a
stadium at Pickett's Lock and the costs of staging the event.

In an emergency meeting with IAAF officials on Friday, Jowell had offered to
take the event to the Don Valley stadium in Sheffield but had the proposal
rejected.

According to sources who attended the meeting, at one point Richard Caborn,
the British sports minister, turned to IAAF president Lamine Diack, of
Senegal, and offered to give sports bursaries to Africans. The normally calm
Diack, a former Senegalese government minister, was incensed at this
attempted inducement.

Yesterday, the DCMS spokesman justified the approach by saying, "The offer
was linked into facilities at the UK Sports Institute - there are countries
who do not have those facilities, we could offer scholarships to athletes
from Africa."

Istvan Gyulai, general secretary of the IAAF, said, "We did not pay too much
attention to these offers, because we were only interested in staging the
athletics in London."

"There are other stadiums in Britain, and other cities, such as Manchester
and Birmingham, which are more suitable for our championships. But it was
clear that they wanted Sheffield."

Australia may step in with a bid to host the 2005 championships. Simon
Allatson, chief executive of Athletics Australia, said yesterday three
Australian cities could be contenders. They were Perth, which was already
planning a bid to stage the championships in 2007, Sydney, which staged last
year's Olympics, and Melbourne, hosts to the 2006 Commonwealth Games.

The IAAF was expected to invite fresh bids for 2005, with Berlin, Budapest
and Tokyo among the likely contenders.

Eamonn Condon
www.RunnersGoal.com

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