The Phnom Penh Post

Russia’s Olympic own goal

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THE Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s decision to ban Russia from the 2018 Winter Games in South Korea will certainly enrage and disappoint many Russians. They may point out, correctly, that sports doping and cheating exist in the West, too – witness Lance Armstrong. But what’s important this time, as multiple investigat­ions have revealed, is that doping in Russia was a state-sponsored activity, under the Sports Ministry and with help from the Federal Security Service, a successor agency to the Soviet KGB. The unpreceden­ted action by the IOC was justified.

Investigat­ions have shown Russian cheating to be wide- spread. Richard McLaren’s report last December for the World Anti-Doping Agency, based in part on evidence obtained from the computer of a Russian whistleblo­wer, found that Russia had carried out an “institutio­nal conspiracy” involving both summer and winter athletes, the Ministry of Sport and the FSB “for the purposes of manipulati­ng doping controls”. Moreover, the “systematic and centralise­d cover up and manipulati­on of the doping control process” extended from the London 2012 Summer Games to the Sochi 2014 Winter Games, and for a while after that, too.

Perhaps the most remarkable and brazen corruption took place at Sochi, the extravagan­za that President Vladimir Putin hailed as a symbol of Russia’s resurgence. Unbeknowns­t to the world at the time, the Russian government ran a scheme to tamper with the urine samples of Russian athletes, including those who had been given a cocktail of steroids. According to McLaren, at a Sochi laboratory, dirty samples were passed through a “mouse hole” where they were swapped for clean ones. In the “well-oiled systemic cheating scheme”, if any athletes using drugs to cheat were not shielded from detection by the various field mechanisms Russia had put in place, they were protected by a “final failsafe mechanism” that would falsify their test results. McLaren found evidence that the deputy sports minister was in charge of the process.

Russia’s Olympic gold medals at Sochi have been revised in light of the findings from 13 to nine; silver from 11 to four; bronze from nine to eight. All told, McLaren reported that more than 1,000 Russian athletes were either involved in or benefited from the coverup and manipulati­on of the doping control process. In South Korea, individual Russian athletes who are clean, based on “strict conditions” and a review

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