Coe will be 'tough' on athletes seeking nationality switch
World Athletics President Sebastian Coe speaks to the media ahead of the Gaborone 26 World Athletics Relays in Gaborone on May 1, 2026. (Photo by AFP)
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World Athletics president Sebastian Coe has told AFP he will remain "tough" on the issue of athletes switching nationality after his federation blocked a bid by top Jamaicans and Kenyans to move to Turkey.
The 2024 Olympic men's discus champion Roje Stona from
Jamaica, and a quintet of Kenyans including former women's marathon world
record-holder Brigid Kosgei, were among the 11 targeted by lucrative offers
from Turkey.
"The concept is very simple, there should be a very
clear understanding and philosophy that the country an athlete starts their
career in is the country that they finish their career in," Coe said in an
interview on Friday ahead of the World Athletics Relays event in Botswana.
"And for global championships to have meaning and to
have understanding, people need to witness championships where you have
national-based competitions," he added.
Coe said a World Athletics panel examined every request to
switch nationality and he accepted in some cases there would be circumstances
in which it was acceptable, such as marriage or "political
intolerance".
But he said Turkey's bid to recruit elite athletes from
other countries by offering them financial packages in a bid to boost its medal
count at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics was the kind of move that would always
be rejected.
"If it is simply about wanting to move from one
federation to another, that doesn't fall into that criteria. We will remain
tough," Coe said.
"It's very important, most federations rely very
heavily on government investment and government investment will dry up if those
governments think that they are investing in talent programmes for other
countries."
Letsile Tebogo, the 2024 Olympic 200 metres champion and the
leading light of a talented crop of Botswanan sprinters, revealed in December
that he has rebuffed offers to switch to Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and
Tunisia.
Botswana, a country of 2.5 million inhabitants which is
largely desert, has experienced economic turbulence with the downturn of the
global diamond market, which represents 30 percent of its GDP, but continues to
inject funds into its successful athletics programme.

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