IAAF stands firm on Gatlin ruling

Athletics : While US sports officials must abide by an American court ruling allowing Justin Gatlin to race at the US Olympic…

Athletics: While US sports officials must abide by an American court ruling allowing Justin Gatlin to race at the US Olympic trials, world bodies today made it clear the banned 100 metres Olympic champion is not eligible to participate in either the Games or other international events.

"He will not be allowed to run in any international competition during the period of his suspension," International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) spokesman Nick Davies said.

Davies' comments echo a similar statement from the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

"Pursuant to the sanction that was imposed upon Mr. Gatlin as a consequence of an anti-doping violation, Mr. Gatlin is not eligible to compete in the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games," the IOC said in a letter to the US Olympic Committee (USOC) as Gatlin fought the terms of his doping ban in a US court.

READ MORE

Gatlin was suspended for four years for a 2006 positive doping test and has had an appeal denied by the Lausanne-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

But a federal judge in his hometown of Pensacola, Florida, last week issued a temporary restraining order barring the IAAF, USOC, USA Track & Field and the US Anti-Doping Agency from preventing Gatlin from competing in the American trials, which begin on Friday in Eugene, Oregon.

Judge Lacey Collier is expected to rule later today on a motion by Gatlin's attorney for a preliminary injunction that would allow the 26-year-old Gatlin to participate in the selection meeting.

Attorneys for the four sports organisations argued at a hearing yesterday that US courts did not have any jurisdiction with regard to Gatlin's suspension and that he would have to go to the Swiss high court to lodge any appeal.

Davies said the IAAF agreed.

"We consider CAS decisions to be final and binding and do not think that a US court has jurisdiction over rules of international track and field," he insisted.

The IOC and attorneys for the four sports bodies said Gatlin's recourse was to take the case to the Swiss Federal Tribunal.

However, Gatlin alleged in a lawsuit against the four bodies that the Americans with Disabilities Act was violated when an arbitration panel used a 2001 positive test by Gatlin to increase his penalty for the 2006 offense.

The sprinter tested positive in the 2001 case for amphetamines that were part of a medication to treat Attention Deficit Disorder.