There is no way Olympic and world 100 metres champion Justin
Gatlin can avoid a lifetime ban if his positive test for
testosterone is confirmed, a senior IAAF official said on
Monday.
IAAF general secretary Pierre Weiss, speaking on the sidelines
of a news conference to open the world junior championships, said
any work American Gatlin's lawyers did to prove there were special
circumstances would be in vain.
"There is no question," Weiss said. "The rules are very clear,
two years for a first offence then a lifetime ban.
"If it is confirmed that he has tested positive for
testosterone, I don't see any way not to impose a lifetime
ban."
The IAAF are still waiting to receive official confirmation of
the charges against Gatlin from the US Anti-Doping Agency
(USADA).
Gatlin appealed against his first positive test, for amphetamine
at the US junior championships in 2001, saying the drug was
contained in a prescription medicine he had taken for 10 years to
counter a form of attention deficit disorder.
As a result, The International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF) reinstated him early from his two-year ban,
although he was told that another positive test would result in a
lifetime ban.
BITTERLY DISAPPOINTED
IAAF president Lamine Diack said on Monday that the rules under
which Gatlin's first ban was appealed no longer stood and
reiterated his disappointment that such a high profile athlete had
tested positive.
"We were all bitterly disappointed to hear ... Gatlin failed a
dope test," Diack told the news conference.
"Although his case has not yet been concluded, we must use this
opportunity to underline the IAAF's total commitment to the fight
against doping.
"In order to defend the credibility of our sport we will engage
all our efforts ... to defend the majority of clean athletes
against the small minority who persist in ignoring our anti-doping
rules."
Late last month, Gatlin announced he had tested positive for
male sex hormone testosterone or its precursors but said he did not
know how the substance had got into his sample.
The 24-year-old New Yorker maintained he had never knowingly
taken any banned substance.
His lawyer Cameron Myler said last week that Gatlin's legal team
would try to invoke the World Anti-Doping Agency WADA's exceptional
circumstances provision.
This allows the voiding of charges or reduction of sanctions if
the athlete is bears no fault or negligence for the violation.
The world junior championships take place in Beijing, host city
of the 2008 Summer Olympics, from Tuesday to Sunday.
(Reuters via China Daily August 15, 2006)