Lance Armstrong accuses Hein Verbruggen of doping cover-up
Lance Armstrong claims the ex-president of cycling's world governing body knew he was doping and helped cover it up.
The American was stripped of his seven Tour de France
titles last year before admitting he had taken performance-enhancing
drugs during his career.
Armstrong
told the Daily Mail
that Hein Verbruggen helped him avoid a ban in 1999 by agreeing to
blame a positive test on a backdated prescription for a steroid cream to
treat saddle sores.
Verbruggen has denied any wrongdoing.
Dutchman Verbruggen was president of the International
Cycling Union (UCI) when Armstrong tested positive at the 1999 Tour de
France.

Lance Armstrong admits doping to win cycling titles
The American says Verbruggen approved the idea of backdating the prescription to help protect the image of the sport.
Armstrong, who 'won' his first Tour de France in 1999,
told the Daily Mail: "The real problem was, the sport was on life
support [after the 1998 Festina drugs scandal]. And Hein just said,
'This is a real problem for me, this is the knockout punch for our
sport, the year after Festina, so we've got to come up with something'.
So we backdated the prescription."
In a letter to the national federations, published
earlier this month, Verbruggen said his conscience was "absolutely
clean".
He wrote: "I have never acted inappropriately. With the
benefit of hindsight, however, I admit that I could have done some
things differently, but I do not accept that my integrity is in doubt."
Current UCI president Brian Cookson
was elected in September
promising that establishing independent anti-doping procedures and
carrying out "a swift investigation into cycling's doping culture" were
his priorities.
The organisation claimed in a statement that it would fully examine its own role in the scandals of the past.
"The UCI's Independent Commission of Inquiry is in the process of being set up," it read.
"The commission will invite individuals to provide
evidence and we would urge all those involved to come forward and help
in its work.
"This investigation is essential to the well-being of
cycling in fully understanding the doping culture of the past, the role
of the UCI at that time and helping us all to move forward to a clean
and healthy future."
Verbruggen is still a member of the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) which responded to Armstrong's latest claims by
questioning his integrity and stating that it would wait for the UCI's
own conclusions before acting.
"It is hard to give any credibility to the claims of a
cyclist who appears to have misled the world for decades," read an IOC
statement.
"We await proper considered outcomes from this investigation rather than rumour and accusation."
In August 2012, Armstrong was stripped of his seven
Tour de France titles and accused by the United States Anti-Doping
Agency of the "most sophisticated, professionalised and successful
doping programme sport has ever seen".
After repeatedly denying accusations of doping, he finally admitted in a television
interview with chatshow host Oprah Winfrey
in January that he had taken performance-enhancing drugs during his career.