The president of the French figure skating federation said on Thursday that he might resign over the sex abuse scandal that has engulfed his sport, while the coach at the centre of the controversy is ready to face prosecutors.
Didier Gailhaguet, the long-time head of French skating, said on evening television that he would resign - if he had to.
"If I'm the one who has to resign because it's the only way to unblock the situation, of course I'll do it," Gailhaguet said, before repeating his complaint that critics, led by sports minister Roxana Maracineanu, had not listened to his explanations.
"I would like to have said what I still have to say, which is not quite finished," he said.
Earlier, lawyers representing Gilles Beyer, the coach accused of rape by former skaters, told AFP that he is prepared to talk to prosecutors investigating claims of sexual abuse of minors in figure skating.
"Gilles Beyer has been placed on the chopping block for days by the media but he will save any comment for the prosecutors," his lawyer Thibault de Montbrial told AFP.
In an autobiography published last week, Sarah Abitbol, a former world championship bronze medallist, accused Beyer of raping her several times from 1990 to 1992 when she was between the ages of 15 and 17.
That started a cascade of further accusations.
Another skater, Helene Godard, accused Beyer and another coach Jean-Roland Racle of sexual abuse when she was a minor.
On Wednesday, sports daily L'Equipe reported that the mother of another young skater claims that Beyer sexually harassed and blackmailed her in 2017 and 2018 in return for coaching her daughter.
Maracineanu has called for Gailhaguet to step down over the accusations, saying he has "personal responsibility" for the handling of the case.
"Logically, it's after completing an investigation that we determine the culprits," responded the 66-year-old Gailhaguet on Thursday.
"There, a culprit is designated and then we say: 'we're setting up an investigation'."
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