World athletics governing body IAAF has frozen the transfer of allegiance in the sport barely a day after Citizen TV and Citizen Digital revealed how the Gulf State of Bahrain was recruiting young Kenyans in their scheme to establish themselves as a global force in distance running.

“Following a proposal by Sebastian Coe, Council has today frozen all new transfers of allegiance in athletics by exercising its powers under the Constitution to revoke Competition Rules 5.2(b), 5.4(d) and 5.4(e) with immediate effect.

“A working group, set up to study the subject area, will submit proposals for new rules as a matter of urgency and no later than the end of this year,” the IAAF said in a statement released on Monday night.

The decision will not affect the 15 applications for transfer which are already in process the governing body added.

“It has become abundantly clear with regular multiple transfers of athletes especially from Africa that the present rules are no longer fit for purpose. Athletics, which at its highest levels of competition is a championship sport based upon national teams, is particularly vulnerable in this respect.

“Furthermore, the present rules do not offer the protections necessary to the individual athletes involved and are open to abuse,” IAAF President, Lord Sebastian Coe remarked following the IAAF Council Meeting in Monaco where he made the proposal to curb switching citizenship among athletes.

Confederation of Africa Athletics President Hamad Kalkaba Malboum who is an IAAF Vice-President will drive this piece of work with the working group shared by Japanese national, Hiroshi Yokokawa.

The Africa Area Group Representative in the IAAF Council slammed the present situation where countries like Bahrain, Qatar and Turkey were pouring their wealth in the continent to lure their brightest talent to run for them.

“The present situation is wrong. What we have is a wholesale market for African talent open to the highest bidder.

“Our present rules are being manipulated to the detriment of athletics’ credibility. Lots of the individual athletes concerned, many of whom are transferred at a young age, do not understand that they are forfeiting their nationality. This must end and a new way forward found which respects the athletes’ rights and the sports’ dignity,” Kalkaba lamented.

His sentiments echo the feelings of most Kenyans who watched or read the piece titled Medals for Passports that aired on Citizen TV and published on Citizen Digital on Sunday night.

It was revealed that Bahrain has recruited a team of 15 Kenyans in Kapsabet to train for the IAAF World Cross Championships in Kampala, Uganda that has been training since January with hefty incentives including a monthly stipend of KSh800,000 (USD8000) for them and another KSh200,000 (USD2000) to their families.

Speaking to Citizen Digital last November, Coe who was in the process of driving reforms in the sport noted with concern the exodus of young talent especially to wealthy Gulf States saying the system needs to be reviewed to curb the practise.

The announcement will come as a huge blow to the recruitment programme of Bahrain in Kapsabet that is facilitated by local fixers, coaches and brokers some who are inside Athletics Kenya, a federation that should be at the forefront of safeguarding the interests of the runners.

Kenyan born runners, Ruth Jebet and Eunice Kirwa won Bahrain their only medals at the Rio 2016 Olympics, gold in the women 3000m steeplechase and silver in the women marathon, sparking their huge desire to establish training centres in Kenya, Ethiopia and South Africa.

Over 30 athletes with Kenyan roots competed for other nations in Rio, including men 5000m silver winner, Paul Chelimo of the United States, a situation that rang alarm bells the transfer of allegiance system was open to abuse.

While some have hailed the move to invest millions on dollars on largely neglected Kenyan athletes from oil-rich Gulf States, others have compared the practise as modern slavery or child trafficking with officials taking advantage of legal loopholes to enrich themselves by exporting young running talent.

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