The Phnom Penh Post

Denials thwart Russian dope efforts

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RUSSIAN sport is bracing for more pain after a bruising year that has seen its athletes turfed out of the Olympics over revelation­s of state-run doping. Further revelation­s are expected today when the final report commission­ed by the World Anti-Doping Agency ( WADA) on Russian doping is released.

In anticipati­on, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee on Wednesday extended sanctions imposed on Russia after the first part of the Richard McLaren report was released in July.

McLaren detailed an elaborate scheme to manipulate drug tests at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics involving the Sports Ministry and the FSB security service.

As a result Russia’s track and field team was barred from the Olympics along with the whole Paralympic­s squad – sanctions that were extended indefinite­ly on Wednesday.

However, Russian authoritie­s claim they are doing all they can to reform – strengthen­ing doping checks and clamping down on cheating.

“Every cloud has a silver lining,” President Vladimir Putin said in his annual state of the nation address this month.

“I am convinced the so-called doping scandal will help us to create the most advanced system to fight this evil.”

But critics insist that the Kremlin is in denial over government involvemen­t and, until that basic hurdle is cleared, nothing will really change.

“There are ongoing statements that there is no state involvemen­t, there are threats to put anybody who reports otherwise in jail,” said WADA founder Dick Pound, who led an earlier investigat­ion into doping in Russian athletics. “It’s not a good sign.”

In the wake of the McLaren revelation­s some Russian officials were dismissed and lawmakers passed new legislatio­n making it a crime to force athletes use performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

More often, however, those in charge have circled the wagons – presenting the doping allegation­s as part of a broader attack by the West against Russia.

Scandal-mired Vitaly Mutko, barred from the Olympics as part of the sanctions, was shifted from his post as sports minister to a more senior position as deputy prime minister that still gives him control over the field.

Tainted faces

Pound called the move a “reward” – designed to take Mutko out of the limelight. A new national anti-doping committee was set up by Putin and 81year-old veteran sports official Vitaly Smirnov placed in charge.

But the same tainted faces that have dominated Russian sports before sit on the body, seen by some as toothless and intended to sugar coat the problem.

The most pressing task for Russia is to try get its track and field athletes competing again in internatio­nal tournament­s while regaining membership of athletics governing body the IAAF.

Mutko has said he hoped that Russia’s track and field athletes will be allowed to compete internatio­nally by the spring, but the IAAF Council this month voted to uphold the suspension while conceding the country had made progress since the summer.

Putin – who had blasted the exclusion of Russia’s track and field team as “beyond the legal sphere and common sense” – said earlier this month that he expected the country to implement a new anti-doping system by early 2017.

In addition to the law that punishes coaches and medical staff for forcing athletes to dope, lawmakers say they are planning addition legislatio­n that would punish drug cheats.

One of the parliament­arians who drafted the law, Dmitry Svishchev, maintained that the Russian government could not have endorsed the use of performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

“The government could not have supported illegal actions,” he said. “The government follows the laws that it makes.”

The findings that will be revealed today “unfortunat­ely are based on speculatio­n of some individual­s”, he said. “There is no state program, no secret laboratory, no deal with the special services, especially not with the FSB,” he added.

“This is a classic informatio­n attack on Russia through sport.”

 ?? ALEXEI DRUZHININ/SPUTNIK/AFP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) speaks with Deputy Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov on October 19. Putin has referred to doping in sport as an ‘evil’.
ALEXEI DRUZHININ/SPUTNIK/AFP Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) speaks with Deputy Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov on October 19. Putin has referred to doping in sport as an ‘evil’.

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