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Olympic champion Ramzi faces IOC over doping

BERNE
Mon Jul 27, 2009 1:58pm EDT
Men's 1,500m gold medallist Rashid Ramzi of Bahrain poses during the medal's ceremony of the athletics competition at the National Stadium during the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, August 20, 2008. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

Men's 1,500m gold medallist Rashid Ramzi of Bahrain poses during the medal's ceremony of the athletics competition at the National Stadium during the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, August 20, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Carlos Barria

BERNE (Reuters) - Olympic 1,500 meters champion Rashid Ramzi appeared before an International Olympic Committee (IOC) disciplinary commission on Monday to give his version of events surrounding a positive doping test after the Beijing Games.

Sports

The Bahraini was one of six competitors who officials said in April had tested positive for the blood booster CERA following last year's Games.

The IOC said in a statement that the commission also discussed the cases of cyclists Davide Rebellin of Italy and Stefan Schumacher of Germany, and athletes Athanasia Tsoumeleka of Greece and Vanja Parisic of Croatia during Monday's hearing.

Rebellin won silver in the individual road race in Beijing while Tsoumeleka won gold in the 20-km walk at the Athens Games and was ninth in the same event in Beijing.

"The IOC Disciplinary Commission gave the athletes and their representatives the opportunity to be heard," said the IOC.

"The decision by the IOC will be taken in due course after deliberation."

An IOC official said that the sixth competitor, Dominican Republic weightlifter Yudelquis Maridalin Contreras, had been cleared by her country's Olympic Committee in June after her B sample was negative.

A test was only recently developed for CERA (Continuous Erythropoiesis Receptor Activator), the new generation of the banned blood-booster erythropoietin (EPO).

The IOC conducted the largest ever doping operation with some 5,000 blood and urine tests during the Games.

The IOC said it was storing samples collected during the Olympic Games for eight years so that they could be analyzed retroactively.

(Reporting by Brian Homewood; Editing by Clare Fallon)



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