Last Updated on 3 June 2026 by Faz Ali

UK Athletics has been fined £350,000 after pleading guilty to corporate manslaughter over the 2017 death of Paralympian Abdullah Hayayei.
Hayayei was killed while training in London ahead of the World Para Athletics Championships.
The case has exposed glaring lapses in event safety and prompted fresh scrutiny of how major sporting bodies manage risk for visiting athletes.
Hayayei, a 36‑year‑old thrower from the United Arab Emirates, had competed at the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio, and was preparing at the Newham Leisure Centre when a metal throwing cage collapsed on him.
Emergency services pronounced him dead at the scene. The tragedy cut short a promising athletic career and left a community demanding answers about preventable failures.
UK Athletics investigation: What was found?
A joint police and health and safety investigation uncovered a critical defect: the stabilising metal lattice base plates for the discus cage were missing.
That absence left the equipment dangerously unstable. Prosecutors argued the condition of the apparatus amounted to gross negligence in safety management by the organisation responsible for the event.
UK Athletics admitted liability in court, entering a guilty plea to corporate manslaughter in February. The organisation was ordered to pay the fine and an additional £44,000 in court costs.
Separately, the head of sport for the 2017 championships, Keith Davies, pleaded guilty to an offence under the Health and Safety at Work Act and received a community order with 175 hours of unpaid work.
Official response and accountability
The Crown Prosecution Service was blunt in its assessment:
There can be no doubt that UK Athletics were grossly negligent in their safety management, which caused the death of a talented athlete.
Prosecutors said equipment had been left in a “seriously unsafe condition” and that Hayayei’s death was avoidable.
UK Athletics issued a statement expressing deep sorrow and acknowledging failings.
The governing body said it had focused on learning from the incident and strengthening standards and safeguards across the sport. The organisation’s apology stopped short of undoing the harm but signalled a commitment to reform.
Legal and organisational consequences
The fine and criminal conviction mark a significant moment for sports governance in the UK. Corporate manslaughter convictions against sporting bodies are rare and carry reputational as well as financial consequences.
The sentence against Davies underscores that individual managers can also face personal accountability when safety systems fail.
For UK Athletics, the ruling will likely trigger internal reviews, policy overhauls, and tighter oversight of event operations. Insurance costs, supplier contracts, and venue checks are all areas that will come under renewed attention.
The case sets a precedent that event organisers cannot treat safety as a box‑ticking exercise; lapses can lead to criminal liability.
Wider implications for sport and visiting athletes
The death of an international athlete on home soil raises questions about how organisers protect competitors, especially those who travel from abroad and rely on hosts for safe facilities. Visiting athletes often lack local knowledge about venues and depend on organisers to ensure equipment and infrastructure meet standards.
Event hosts must now reckon with the reputational risk of inadequate safety regimes. National federations, local authorities, and venue operators will face pressure to demonstrate robust inspection regimes, clear chains of responsibility, and documented maintenance procedures. The case also highlights the need for transparent reporting and independent checks ahead of major competitions.
The human cost
Beyond legal penalties and policy changes, the human toll remains central. Hayayei’s family and teammates have lost a son, friend, and a competitor.
Financial fines and public statements cannot replace a life. The case is a reminder that safety failures have victims and that accountability must include support for those left behind.
There is also an equality dimension. Smaller federations and athletes from less resourced countries may be disproportionately affected when safety standards slip. Ensuring consistent protections for all competitors, regardless of origin, is a moral as well as legal imperative for international sport.
What should change for UK Athletics?
The ruling points to several practical steps organisers should take to reduce risk:
- Rigorous equipment checks before and during events, with documented sign‑offs
- Clear lines of responsibility so that venue managers, event staff, and governing bodies know who inspects and signs off on safety
- Independent audits for high‑risk apparatus and temporary installations
- Training and accountability for staff and volunteers on safety protocols
- Support mechanisms for athletes and families affected by incidents, including transparent communication and compensation pathways
These measures are not novel, but the Hayayei case shows they must be enforced consistently and treated as non‑negotiable.
The long view for UK Athletics
The fine and convictions close one chapter but open another: a period of reckoning for event safety in athletics. UK Athletics has been punished and publicly shamed, and now the sport faces the task of rebuilding trust.
That will require more than policy changes, it will demand cultural change, investment in safety, and a willingness to accept responsibility when systems fail.
For athletes who travel to compete, the message must be clear: organisers are accountable for their safety. For governing bodies, the lesson is equally stark, negligence has consequences, and the cost of complacency can be a life.
Featured Image via Warren Little/ Getty Images
By Faz Ali
