Starting with a new event fronted by Usain Bolt this weekend, athletics will spend 2017 attempting to claw back the fans it lost to the doping scandals unearthed last year. But Haile Gebrselassie – one of track and field’s greatest names – feels athletics is missing Russia more than Russia is missing athletics.

It’s 8am when The Independent meets Haile Gebrselassie at his basement gym in downtown Addis Ababa, the restless capital city of his native Ethiopia. This represents an early appointment for an interview in sports journalism. However the double gold-medallist, who set over 20 world records in a glittering distance running career, has already eaten up 15 miles through the hills and forest by the time we meet.

Gebrselassie retired from competitive running in 2015, but refuses to slow down. The 43-year-old’s latest high altitude “jog” through Yaya Village, 10 miles north of the metropolis, comes on the second day of a three day religious holiday for the East African country. Most of his compatriots are still in bed. Nursing a serious Achilles injury on a chilly morning, he could have pulled up the duvet too. Instead he is not just running, but ready to take questions on the role he is playing in cleaning up doping as the newly appointed head of the Ethiopian Athletics Federation.

“Next month Ethiopia will approve the first prison sentence given to a drugs cheat in athletics,” is one of the first statements Gebrselassie wants to make to The Independent, revealing something as yet unreported overseas. Sentences of between three to five years were introduced as deterrents prior to Gebrselassie’s appointment in November but no-one had been brought to court and prosecuted until he took office.

The Atlanta and Sydney Olympics 10,000 metres gold medallist and former marathon world record holder is known for his gentle public demeanour. However, the evidence he will give in person at the historic sentencing hearing will showcase the streak of toughness and fairness than runs through him.

“We need to be strict,” Gebreselassie says, admitting that Russia was a wake-up call for a sport that had been complacent for too long. “There must be a tough punishment. When we do this, the rest of the world needs to be strong too.”

Germany is so far the only nation to follow Ethiopia in passing new legislation carrying prison sentences for doping. Gebreselassie has promised life bans from athletics for doping offences also and this is something he hopes can be replicated more swiftly internationally.

“It’s really important to work together, not just the federations, but the event organisers, the athlete managers, everyone. We need to have honest athletes that forget about shortcuts; ones who believe in sweating, not taking. When athletes take drugs they may make money in the short -term, but in the long term, when they think about what they’ve done, they will regret it. They are directly cheating money out of the pockets of other athletes.”

“I don’t want to support people who have this evil in them. I had a long discussion with the federation when I took over and we decided we had no choice but to implement a life-ban policy for athletes caught doping. Thanks to the government, we also have prison available as a punishment.”

Girmay Birahun, a little known 22-year-old, will be the first athlete to go to jail for doping. The marathon runner tested positive for Meldonium – the substance that brought down Maria Sharapova – in random out-of-competition testing in the first days of Gebreselassie’s new regime. The drug was added to the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) banned list relatively recently but its energy-enhancing capacity is proven.

Gebrselassie believes winning while Russian athletes are banned will not be as fulfilling (Getty)

“In a way I am scared for the athlete, sad for him, for what he will face in jail. Three years minimum. That’s a very bad punishment for someone to face. He will be the first Ethiopian athlete to go to jail and he has been crying non-stop ever since. But I need to work to protect the majority, not the individual.”

“Some of my athletes are blaming me for the athlete going to prison, but it’s the government who made the decision to give prison sentences and it’s not me testing the urine. Meldonium is a big drug now, one I am still learning about. We have had two other Ethiopian athletes test positive for it but not at a level that Wada suggests athletes should be punished for. They are based in America too, which creates problems for us in terms of whereabouts testing.”

Combining enhanced testing processes with tougher punishments positions Ethiopia at the forefront of athletics’ belated efforts to be taken seriously <p> </p>

Gebrselassie says he was never offered an illegal substance throughout his career. It was the recent scandals in Russia and Kenya which encouraged him and his country’s government to guard against the complacency he admits Ethiopia may have been guilty of in the past. Over 1,000 Russians have been implicated in state-sponsored doping alleged by Wada. Russia continues to be banned from athletics competition while Kenya flirted with a suspension last year.

“We have had a national doping agency in Ethiopia for two years now, testing athletes, cyclists and footballers. Before that we didn’t have an agency, we had one man. And he was working with our doctors. They were one team together.”

Gebrselassie acknowledges the system has been slack and for too long. It is getting more rigorous. The country’s growing economy is helping to fund greater lab testing in Paris. “We have sent 120 samples to France for testing – each sample costing $500 – for the past two years.” Combining enhanced testing processes with tougher punishments positions Ethiopia at the forefront of athletics’ belated efforts to be taken seriously.

Gebrselassie risks this with his next comments to The Independent however, a contentious call for Russia to be welcomed back into athletics in time for this summer’s world championships in London. It’s a controversial view as Russia’s critics claim it is yet to admit conspiracy let alone countenance meaningful reforms.

Gebrselassie’s argument is two-fold.

Gebrselassie competing alongside Farah back in 2013 (Getty)

“There are innocent Russian athletes as well as guilty Russian athletes,” he begins, repeating what many others have been keen to remind the hardliners. “You can’t punish the majority for the actions of the minority. You could then end up banning 2,000 Ethiopian athletes for the actions of, say, just five or six. I don’t agree with the punishment of Russia [as a blanket ban].”

Imagine a football World Cup where you don’t have to defeat Germany, France or Italy <p>Haile Gebrselassie</p>

Gebrselassie’s second justification is one that no-one in athletics has made during Russia’s suspension. It reflects the deeply competitive traits that still burn within him. He wants the Ethiopian team he now oversees to win the medals the country has struggled to secure since his retirement; but more than that, he wants Ethiopia to win against all the countries he considers to be the historical heavyweights of athletics.

“My worry is for the feeling of the competition without Russia. Winning medals in athletics without defeating Russia… you cannot experience the same feeling. Imagine a football World Cup where you don’t have to defeat Germany, France or Italy. In athletics, winning races where you don’t have to defeat Russians or Kenyans, that’s not a real competition.”