
Some Kenyan Runners See Doping as a Path to Glory, and to Basic Sustenance
The town also has a far less laudatory reputation. It is a well-documented center of a doping crisis that shows little sign of being tamed.
Runners come here for access to competition, coaching talent and the benefit of training in thin air, all to try to earn riches from running. Many Kenyans who try to join the elite endure cramped and dirty living conditions, little food and separation from their families in service of their ambitions.
In a region where the average annual income is the equivalent of little more than $2,000 and the competition so intense, the potentially life-changing lure of banned substances, referred to locally as 'the medicine,' is obvious. A few thousand dollars in prize money or participation in a single overseas race can be the difference between runners and their families eating three meals a day and scratching around for the next bite.
Ethiopia
Uganda
Iten
Kenya
Eldoret
Nairobi
Indian
Ocean
Tanzania
100 miles
By The New York Times
They calculate that doping is worth the risks not only of getting caught, but also of damaging their health and, in some cases, even dying.
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