The Olympic body said today it has asked the World Anti-Doping Agency's independent commission for transcripts from its report on doping and corruption in track and field that raises the possibility that USD 5 million in sponsorship money was paid to help Tokyo secure the games.
A footnote to the WADA report indicates that former IAAF president Lamine Diack was prepared to sell his vote in the 2020 bidding contest in exchange for sponsorship of IAAF events.
The report suggests that Diack -- an IOC member at the time -- dropped his support for Istanbul because Turkey refused to pay, and backed Tokyo after the Japanese did pay.
The statement noted that Dick Pound, an IOC member who chaired the WADA panel, said he was "fairly confident" the current Olympic bidding process is free or organized corruption.
"We have done an enormous amount since 1999, to make sure that that cannot happen," Pound said, referring to the cleanup after the Salt Lake City bidding scandal.
"If there is going to be individual bits of corruption you can't stop all that. But organizationally, I don't think that's an issue with the Olympics."
sponsorship moneys of USD4 to 5 million either to the Diamond League or IAAF," the note said, referring to Lamine Diack.
"According (to) the transcript the Japanese did pay such a sum."
"The 2020 Games were awarded to Tokyo," the note added.
"The IC did not investigate this matter further for it was not within our remit."
Tokyo defeated Istanbul 60-36 in the final round of IOC voting in 2013 in Buenos Aires. The third candidate, Madrid, was eliminated earlier in a runoff with Istanbul.
In a statement, a spokeswoman for the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee said the note in the WADA report was "beyond our understanding."
Diack, of Senegal, served as an IOC member from 1999 to 2013, when he became an honorary member after reaching the age limit of 80.
Diack was suspended as an honorary IOC member in November after he was placed under criminal investigation in France on corruption and money-laundering charges in connection with cover-ups of Russian doping cases. He subsequently resigned as an honorary member.
As a senior figure in the Olympic world, Diack could have held sway in influencing a bloc of IOC votes.
"We have had reports from people who seem to know what they are talking about," Pound said at a news conference. "We have brought that to the attention of the IAAF and recommended they take a vigorous forensic look at it, to see whether there is anything to the allegations.
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