India’s sports minister yesterday sacked the Ukrainian coach of the country’s top female 400m runners after six of them tested positive for banned steroids in a major doping scandal.

“I have asked for his removal and he has already been re-moved,” Ajay Maken told a news conference in New Delhi, referring to Yuri Ogrodnik, who coached three of the six to gold medals at the Commonwealth and Asian Games last year.

Late Monday, one of India’s brightest female track stars, Ashwini Akkunji, joined her 4x400m relay team-mates Sini Jose and Mandeep Kaur in failing a drugs test because of traces of a banned anabolic steroid in her urine.

Akkunji, Jose and Kaur were part of India’s Commonwealth and Asian Games-winning team in New Delhi and Guangzhou, China, last year. Akkunji also took the 400m hurdles Asiad title in a personal best time.

The trio are among eight athletes – six female 400m runners, a female shot-putter and a male long-jumper – who have now failed drugs tests, casting a cloud over Indian athletics and denting the country’s Olympic ambitions.

All have been provisionally suspended pending the testing of their “B” samples later this week, the National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) said yesterday.

Maken told reporters that he has asked the Sports Authority of India, NADA and the Athletics Federation of India for detailed reports into the circumstances leading to the positive tests and ordered an inquiry by a retired high court judge.

“We will catch coaches and officials who were involved, not just athletes,” Maken vowed, adding: “We can’t be lenient...

“The coach says he didn’t know that the athletes were taking banned substances then I think he’s all the more responsible for what’s happened. The coach is supposed to know what they’re taking and tell them what to take.”

The tests were carried out either at a training camp in Patiala, in the northern state of Punjab, in the last two months or after a track meeting in the southern city of Bangalore in late June.

The athletes have all protested their innocence and blamed contaminated food supplements for the results. They have also claimed that there were not enough doctors to advise them on which supplements to take.

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