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IOC to bring case against Greek coach

ATHENS (Reuters) – The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has served a lawsuit against the coach of former Greek Olympic champion Fani Halkia who tested positive for drugs during the Beijing Olympics.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) lawyer Petros Mahas told Reuters the IOC had already presented its evidence to Greek prosecutors to bring charges against George Panagiotopoulos for breaking 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.”

Halkia, 29, who was a surprise winner in the 400 metres hurdles at the 2004 Games, tested positive for the steroid methyltrienolone around August10 in Japan before she travelled to Beijing.

She became the 19th Greek athlete to test positive since April, when sports authorities redoubled efforts ahead of the Beijing Games and now faces a two-year ban.

It was the biggest of several doping setbacks for the Greek team, prompting top IOC officials to single Greece out for criticism.

“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.”

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.

(Writing by Daniel Flynn; Editing by Padraic Halpin)

Written by Israel Saria

For the last 20 years I have been working as a football pundit. This experience has provided me with a very useful insight into football and the opportunity to carry out extensive research into the game including its players, the stadiums, the rules and tactics and I have also been grateful to meet a wide range of people connected to football in the UK, Tanzania, Germany .....

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