Hajo Seppelt

Hans-Joachim “Hajo” Seppelt (born 1963 in Berlin) is a German journalist and author. He is considered an expert on doping in German and international sports.

Life and career

Seppelt is the son of Alfred Seppelt, who was the head of the Berlin Chess Federation from 1984 to 2004.

In 1981, he got his college preparatory degree (Abitur) at the Beethoven-Oberschule in Berlin’s Lankwitz neighborhood. He studied sports, social studies, journalism and French at the Free University of Berlin for a few semesters but did not complete a degree. Since 1985, he has worked as a sports reporter for Germany’s premier public broadcaster ARD. He has also worked for the Berlin public broadcaster Sender Freies Berlin and its 2003 successor Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. After working for many years as a live commentary for swimming events for ARD, he was stripped of this duty in the early summer of 2006. Seppelt claims that this was in reaction to a private email, in which he criticized ARD’s uncritical reporting on doping, becoming public. Since 2006, he has worked as a freelance journalist for ARD and has made a number of reports and documentary films about doping.

Together with the former Canadian swimmer Karin Helmstaedt, Seppelt made the documentary film Staatsgeheimnis Kinderdoping (State Secret Child Doping) about the perpetrators and victims of doping in East German swimming. It was broadcast by ARD. Together with Holger Schück, he published the book Anklage: Kinderdoping. Das Erbe des DDR-Sports (Indictment Doping: The Legacy of East German Sports) in 1999. It also dealt with the topic of state doping in Communist East Germany.

In 2006, Seppelt reported extensively about the doping problem in cycling. Among other things, his research led to the identification of the German physician Markus Choina as a member of the doping network organized by Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes.[1] In November of that year, he was awarded the Leuchtturm für besondere publizistische Leistungen (Lighthouse Prize for Special Journalist Achievement) by the journalists’ association Netzwerk Recherche for his research, reports and exclusive revelations about cyclists Jan Ullrich and Floyd Landis and Eufemiano Fuentes.[2]

In the television report Mission: Sauberer Sport (The Mission to Clean Up Sports), Seppelt and Jo Goll documented the work of German doping controllers. The film highlighted flaws in Germany’s doping-control system and caused heady public discussions, which contributed to structural changes in Germany’s National Anti Doping Agency (NADA). The report won the Silver Chest Award 2007 at the International Television Film Festival in Plovdiv and the international Sports Movie and TV Award 2007 in Milan.[3] The film was also nominated for the German Television Prize and the Prix Europa.

Seppelt’s work was not without controversy. In mid-January the German Skiing Association (DSV) took legal action, and a Hamburg court issued an injunction against him for refusing to make a cease-and-desist declaration demanded by the DSV about suspicions that German cross-country skiers and biathletes had engaged in blood doping in a Vienna laboratory.[4] A superior court in Hamburg overturned that ruling in Seppelt’s favor, concluding that DSV had no right to demand the cease-and-desist declaration because it was not affected by the journalist’s reporting. The ruling was based constitutional guarantees of journalist freedom in cases of anonymous sources. The judgement also overturned an injunction from October 21, 2008.[5] Seppelt’s suspicion could not be proved after extensive investigations.

Parallel with the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, ARD broadcast the 45-minute-documentary Olympia im Reich der Mittel: Doping in China (Flying High in the Middle Kingdom: Doping in China), which Seppelt made with Jo Goll. The film reported about doping and doping controls in China, in particularly above proven case of stem-cell manipulation carried out on top athletes.[6] At the International New York Film Festival, it won a world gold medal for long-form reporting. It was also awarded the main prize at 2009 Sportfilm Liberec 2007 - World Facts Challenge festival.[7] Ahead of the 2009 Athletics World Championships in Berlin, ARD broadcast the feature Geheimsache Doping (The Doping Secret) by Hajo Seppelt and Robert Kempe about the people who pull the strings in doping in track-and-field.[8]

Ahead of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, ARD broadcast the 30-minute feature Geheimsache Doping - Eiskalter Betrug (The Doping Secret – Cheating on Ice). In it, Seppelt, Kempe and Jochen Leufgens took a behind-the-scenes look at winter sports.[9]

In the wake of research by Seppelt in September 2010 about the world’s top cyclist Alberto Contador, the Union Cycliste Internationale UCI had to admit that the Spanish Tour de France winner had turned up positive in doping tests. It emerged that the UCI had wanted to keep a positive test by Contador for the substance Clenbuterol at the Tour de France in July 2010 under wraps.[10] In February 2012, Contador was retroactively banned for two years, from August 2010 to August 2012, by the International Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) for Clenbuterol use.[11]

In May 2011, Seppelt and co-filmmaker Kempe had the chance to film footage about sports for a week in Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea. The result was the documentary film Sport in Nordkorea - Einblicke in eine unbekannte Welt (Sports in North Korea – A Look at an Unknown World), which was broadcast by ARD in July 2011.

In January 2012 Seppelt and colleagues from the Western German public broadcaster WDR had reports featured on ARD and WDR sports programs about the blood of thirty athletes being exposed to ultra-violet radiation by a sports doctor in the Eastern German city of Erfurt. Several of the athletes concerned were named. In the wake of the broadcasts, a discussion arose as to whether such procedures were banned according to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) code. WADA itself considered them to be.[12] Anti-doping investigations of the athletes ended up with discontinuations and acquittals due to extenuating circumstances, and a criminal investigation of the doctor concerned was also discontinued. Nonetheless, many experts declared that blood treatments were banned in principle by the laws governing sports. The doctor tried to get a superior court in Cologne to issue an injunction against WDR,[13] but the broadcaster won out, and the report was allowed to contain references to “forbidden blood treatments.”[14]

In the spring and summer of 2012, Seppelt and Kempe reported for the first time about doping among Kenyan track-and-field athletes. The focus was primarily on practices among doctors in the background. One athlete told of widespread doping among Kenyan long-distance runners.[15][16] The reports caused intense reactions in Kenya and met with considerable international resonance. As a result, doping controls were stepped up in the country.

In 2013, Seppelt and Kempe completed a critical documentary about Thomas Bach, shortly before he was elected president of the International Olympic Committee.

In 2014, with the help of athletes, who told their stories in front of the camera, Seppelt reported about widespread doping in Russia. In December of that year, ARD broadcast Seppelt’s film Geheimsache Doping: Wie Russland seine Sieger macht (The Doping Secret: How Russia Creates Champions). In this 60-minute documentary, whistleblowers testified to systematic doping in athletics and other sports in Russia. The film presents evidence for these allegations in form of footage and audio recordings secretly made by the whistleblowers as well as official documents. The documentary, which was followed a short time later by films in ARD and WDR, attracted substantial global media resonance and was broadcast worldwide in a number of languages. After its broadcast in Germany, several figures in international sports organizations and anti-doping institutions either resigned their posts or were suspended.

Last winter, Hajo Seppelt caused a stir with a documentary presenting indications of systematic doping within the Russian Athletics Federation. On Saturday, August 1, he was back at it with a nearly hourlong report that asked serious question of athletics in general and Kenya's long-distance runners in particular.

Doping - Top Secret: The Shadowy World of Athletics. The documentary shows that it is relatively easy to obtain banned performance-enhancing drugs in Kenya and traces the story of an impoverished young runner who seems to have died from the side effects of taking EPO.

Kenyan athletics authorities refused to speak with Seppelt about the issue, and his film presents circumstantial evidence of corruption among Kenyan sports functionaries. Former Boston marathon winner Rito Jeptoo asserts that Kenyan athletes are not subjected to blood tests while training. Another Kenyan runner claims that the national federation suppresses positive doping results in return for bribes.

Seppelt also suggests the International Association of Athletics Federations isn't doing enough to address the problem of doping in endurance disciplines. After evaluating data on athletes' blood collected at major athletics competitions over a number of years, two Australian scientists conclude that doping is the only plausible explanation for some of the measurements. The IAAF also refused to speak with Seppelt about his suspicions.

In March 2016, in its Sport Inside program, the WDR broadcast the third part of the series on doping in athletics with a focus on Russia: “Geheimsache Doping: Russlands Täuschungsmanöver” (“The Doping Secret: Russia’s Red Herrings”). In it, Hajo Seppelt, together with co-author Florian Riesewieck, showed how Russian coaches and officials avoided conditions of the World Athletics Federation IAAF and the World Anti-Doping Agency WADA. The 30-minute documentary once again received an extensive international echo and was broadcast in several countries.

Awards and honors

Publications

Books

Selected television reports and documentary films

References

  1. RBB Online, Nach ARD-Informationen Deutscher Komplize des spanischen Dopingnetzwerkes identifiziert
  2. RBB Online, Journalistenpreis für RBB-Sportreporter Hajo Seppelt
  3. inside-digital.de, Archive copy at the Wayback Machine
  4. FOCUS Online, Deutsche in Wiener Blutbank (16. Januar 2008)
  5. taz, Das Klima ist rauer (1. Dezember 2008)
  6. DOKfilm, Olympia im Reich der Mittel
  7. NDR, Auszeichnung Sportfilm Liberec 2009
  8. ARD, Archive copy at the Wayback Machine
  9. ARD, Archive copy at the Wayback Machine
  10. Tagesschau, Archive copy at the Wayback Machine
  11. sportschau
  12. Hajo Seppelt: Interview mit NADA-Generaldirektor David Howman – Erneuter Kurswechsel der WADA im Fall Erfurt?, in: Sportschau.de, 4. Juni 2012.
  13. sid: Erfurter Arzt erwirkt einstweilige Verfügung, in Focus.de, 1. März 2012.
  14. sid: Erfurter Doping-Affäre: WDR siegt vor OLG, in: Focus.de, 27. November 2012.
  15. Topläufer aus Kenia gesteht in der ARD Doping, in: ARD.de, 6. August 2012.
  16. Kenianer Kisorio nennt weitere Doping-Details, in: ARD.de, 8. August 2012.
  17. "Deutscher Fernsehpreis 2013"
  18. "Deutscher Fernsehpreis 2011"
  19. Deutscher Fernsehpreis 2009
  20. 45. Adolf-Grimme-Preis, Nominierungen
  21. "Stefan Niggemeier ist "Journalist des Jahres"". www.dwdl.de. 2007-12-12. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
  22. subtitled documentary

Homepage von Hajo Seppelt [1] Deutscher Fernsehpreis 2016: Sechs Preise für den WDR [2] Der Deutsche Fernsehpreis gibt die Preisentscheidungen 2016 bekannt [3] Der Deutsche Fernsehpreis 2016 Nominierungen http://www.deutscher-fernsehpreis.de/verleihung/nominierungsdetails/details-2015/2015-bester-sportjournalismus-geheimsache-doping/ Nominierung 2015 Sportsmediapearls Awards https://www.sportmediapearlawards.com/nomineesGallery Der Deutsche Fernsehpreis 2016 Nominierungen WDR http://www1.wdr.de/unternehmen/themen/deutscher-fernsehpreis104.html Ausschluss von Russland nicht ausgeschlossen http://www.tagesspiegel.de/sport/dopingskandal-in-der-leichtathletik-ausschluss-von-russland-nicht- ausgeschlossen/12568750.html Der zweite Preis ging an Hajo Seppelt (ARD) für seine außerordentlichen Recherchen zu "Doping in der Leichtathletik".http://www.zdf.de/frontal-21/journalistenpreis-der-lange-atem-frontal21-autoren-fuer-recherchen-zum-thema-nutztierhaltung-geehrt-41152290.html Neun Nominierungen für den “Langen Atem“ 2015 - JVBB vergibt Preis für beharrliche Berichterstattung https://www.jvbb-online.de/startseite/ueber-uns/der-lange-atem/nominierte-2015.html

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