Olympic champion Ramzi stripped of gold medal

“The IOC today announced sanctions against five athletes who  participated in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing for having  committed anti-doping violations,” the IOC said in a statement.

“The athlete, Rashid Ramzi shall be disqualified from the  athletics men’s 1,500m event, where he had placed first. He  shall have his medal and diploma in the above-mentioned event  withdrawn,” the IOC said.

Moroccan-born Ramzi, Bahrain’s first Olympic champion was  the only gold medallist among the five sanctioned.

The 29-year-old former world champion’s positive for the  banned blood-booster CERA was announced in April after frozen  samples from the Beijing Olympics were re-tested for that  specific substance.

Asbel Kipruto Kiprop of Kenya who won silver behind Ramzi  now stands to be upgraded to gold, with the decision resting on  the IOC. New Zealand’s Nicholas Willis took bronze in the 1,500  final and Mehdi Baala of France was fourth.

“It is good news to me. I can’t speak more than that,”  Kiprop said in Kenya.

Italy’s cycling road race silver medallist Davide Rebellin  was ordered to return his medal by the country’s Olympic  Committee on Tuesday.

The other positive results were from German cyclist Stefan  Schumacher, already banned for doping, Greece’s 2004 Athens  Games 20km walk champion Athanasia Tsoumeleka and Croatian 800  metres runner Vanja Perisic.
The IOC has disqualified the five athletes from the Games,  ordered their federations to adjust the final standings in their  events and take further action regarding their bans.

First-time offenders face an automatic two-year suspension  while repeat offenders could be banned for life.

Under IOC rules anyone handed a six-month suspension or  longer is also banned from competing in the 2012 Games in  London.

The IOC retested 948 athletes’ samples, focusing mainly on  endurance events in cycling, rowing, swimming and athletics.

Six athletes had initially tested positive after Beijing  blood sample retests were conducted months after the Games..

Dominican Republic weightlifter Yudelquis Contreras was  cleared after her B sample came back negative.

Nine other competitors tested positive in tests conducted  during the Games as well as six horses in the equestrian events.