The Phnom Penh Post

Doping showdown at WADA meet

- Eric Bernardeau

SPORTS leaders are at loggerhead­s over how to fight the war against performanc­e-enhancing drugs as the World AntiDoping Agency (WADA) goes into a key reform summit this weekend.

Who should control the global doping watchdog? What powers should it have? Who should pay? A welter of questions have been raised as the Olympic movement and sports federation­s seek to redeem their names after the Russia doping scandal.

The WADA Foundation will have to come up with at least the start of some solid answers after its meeting in Glasgow on Sunday. A new report on Russia is due out within weeks which could heighten pressure to clean up sport.

Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach last month called on WADA to set up a new independen­t unit to manage testing around the world. He promised more money if the reforms are carried out.

‘More political than practical’

The IOC blames sports federation­s for letting cheating flourish and wants to eliminate their role in testing, while transferin­g sanction-taking to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

The IOC has also criticised WADA for failing to act quickly on doping allegation­s in Russia, which was accused of operating a “state-sponsored” scheme over several years.

But there is widespread resistance to the IOC plan outside of WADA, with powerful federation­s indicating they want to be exempt from the reforms.

The head of FIFA’s medical commission, Michel D’Hooghe, said world football’s governing body would not surrender control of its drug testing to a new entity. “We respect the WADA and IOC proposals but they concern the smaller federation­s,” he said.

The head of another federation, who requested anonymity, said his sport would never outsource anti-doping efforts and described the IOC call for a new testing unit as “more political than practical”.

In contrast, Tom Dielen who heads World Archery said there would only be a small impact on smaller sports. “We outsource our controls already,” he said.

While some federation­s have said the IOC proposals are too vague, WADA director-general Olivier Niggli, “it will be up to the IOC to convince federation­s to be part of [the new system], just as it will be up to the IOC to finance it one way or another”.

Despite tensions between WADA and the IOC, an Olympic source said that the IOC was backing WADA president Craig Reedie’s re-election, guaranteei­ng that the 75-year-old Scot will be tapped for another three-year term at Sunday’s meeting.

The IOC already funds half of WA- DA’s $27 million budget. Bach said last month that if WADA leads the reform drive it would require “a substantia­l increase in financing”.

Financing from whom remains an open question.

One idea calls for federation­s, freed from their drug-testing responsibi­lities, to allocate their anti-doping budgets to WADA and the proposed new testing agency.

But if key federation­s like FIFA and the Internatio­nal Cycling Union opt out, it seems unlikely that contributi­ons from minnow federation­s like archery and judo would be enough to support a new organisati­on.

One proposal was to see broadcaste­rs contribute to the new unit, as they stand to benefit if the public sees competitio­n as drug free. Bach distanced himself from that idea last month.

The banning of more than 110 Russian atletes from the Rio Olympics and complete ban from the Paralympic­s sparked outrage in Moscow and accusation­s of double standards.

Russian Olympic Committee president Alexander Zhukov, made clear his opinion of WADA in a letter issued ahead of the Glasgow meeting. “A lot of decisions are made behind closed doors and [WADA] becomes an instrument for manipulati­on, including those of a political nature,” he said.

But he did not rule out backing reforms that would see a WADA with more powers, removing internatio­nal federation­s from the testing system.

 ?? FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP ?? IOC president Thomas Bach (left) speaks with WADA president Craig Reedie prior to an IOC executive meeting on June 2 in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP IOC president Thomas Bach (left) speaks with WADA president Craig Reedie prior to an IOC executive meeting on June 2 in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.

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