UK Athletics Ltd has been fined £350,000 over the "wholly avoidable" death of a Paralympian killed when a practice cage collapsed on his head.
Father of five Abdullah Hayayei was preparing to represent the United Arab Emirates at the World Athletics Championships in London when the 440-pound metal structure fell on him at Newham Leisure Centre in east London on July 11, 2017. Hayayei was 36.
The 5-foot-high cage toppled over because it was put up incorrectly and without its base plate, in an "accident waiting to happen."
UK Athletics Ltd pleaded guilty to corporate manslaughter and on Tuesday was fined £350,000 plus £44,000 costs, to be paid over six years.
Keith Davies, 79, who was head of sport for the 2017 World Paralympic Athletics Championships, admitted a health and safety charge and was handed a community order of 175 hours of unpaid work.
Sentencing, Judge Richard Marks KC said Hayayei's death was "tragic, untimely and wholly avoidable."
The judge noted failings by UK Athletics were not a "one off" but said any financial penalty would "weaken" its ability to support individual athletes and athletics in the community.
He told retired PE teacher Davies that he knew, or ought to have known, base plates were an "integral part" of the cage construction.
Following an earlier collapse of an identical cage, he was "on notice," and the judge said: "This was an accident which sooner or later was waiting to happen."
Previously, Hayayei's widow, Badriah, who attended court by video link from the UAE, described the impact his death has had on herself and her five children, who were aged between two and 14 when they lost their father.
"I hope the court looks at the magnitude of the harm to our family because Abdullah was not just a person who passed away. He was a father, a husband with responsibilities, dreams and a future.
"I hope the court takes a just stance against everyone who caused this because what happened was not just a simple mistake but the result of negligence, gross negligence, that could have been avoided if safety procedures adhered to.
"My husband went out to represent his country and raise the name of the UAE but he returned as a corpse because of this negligence."
The court heard wheelchair user Hayayei, who had cerebral palsy, had been due to compete in the para athletics shot put event during the World Athletics Championships in Stratford.
In the five years since UK Athletics acquired two identical cages originally used in the 2012 Olympics, they had never been properly assembled with the base plates attached, the court heard.
The two practice cages had been given to UK Athletics by the organization committee for the London 2012 Games.
One of them had collapsed in 2012 although no-one was injured on that occasion, the court was told.
Prosecutor John Price KC said: "Over this period, very many athletes will have been within the cages and many more standing or passing close by.
"It was a perennial hazard, or to use a familiar phrase, an accident waiting to happen."
