Other

Polish cycling chief Dariusz Banaszek quits over sex abuse scandal

Banaszek, who became president of Poland's cycling federation (PZKol) in 2016 said he was resigning "for the good of cycling" whilst protesting his innocence.

From our online archive

WARSAW: Polish cycling chief Dariusz Banaszek stood down on Friday amid a sexual abuse and corruption scandal.

Banaszek, who became president of Poland's cycling federation (PZKol) in 2016 said he was resigning "for the good of cycling" whilst protesting his innocence.

Banaszek quits an organisation in the eye of a storm sparked by accusations that PZKol board members carried out serious sex crimes including rape against minors.

The claims were made by former PZKol vice president Piotr Kosmala, who described the scope of the affair as "appalling".

As a result of Kosmala's allegations the Polish Sports Minister Witold Banka called for the federation board's dismissal and cut off funding to the organisation.

PZKol is heavily in debt and its accounts were seized by bailiffs, local agency PAP reported.

In December eight of its nine board members answered Banka's call and stood down, with only Banaszek holding out, until Friday.

Speaking when the case first emerged Banaszek told reporters: "There was no scandal of morality, there was no investigation that would prove it, there is no need for an indictment."

PM Modi asks ministers to focus on 2047 vision, next-generation reforms

Tamil Nadu CM Vijay’s cabinet sets record with seven Dalit ministers handling key portfolios

Key Pulwama terror attack conspirator Hamza Burhan killed by unidentified gunmen in PoK

Parliamentary panel members grill NTA officials over NEET paper 'leak', agency denies breach in system

Send Bangladeshi infiltrators to BSF, not courts: Suvendu tells Bengal police

SCROLL FOR NEXT