The Phnom Penh Post

Russia making progress over doping, says Coe

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IAAF chief Lord Sebastian Coe believes Russia is showing a significan­t change in its attitude to tackling the doping scandal that saw the nation exiled from world athletics.

Russia has been banned from internatio­nal athletics competitio­n since November 2015 after doping issues.

The countr y’s anti-doping agency, RUSADA, is a lso yet to be decla red f ully compli- ant by the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Russian athletes have also effectivel­y been banned from next year’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, unless they can satisfy stringent drug-testing regulation­s in order to compete as neutrals.

Coe indicated there are reasons for hope that Russia is finally dealing with the problem, but he said the IAAF would still resist setting any timescale for the nation’s reintegrat­ion into athletics.

“We made a decision that in a way was quite different to the one the IOC was confronted with,” Coe told BBC Radio Five Live on Sunday. “I’ve had 149 or 150 positive tests in the sport from Russia within a three- or four-year period.

“It was very clear as far I was concerned and the Council of the IAAF was concerned that nobody else was going to come to our rescue here. We had to take the appropriat­e action.

“We set up the taskforce which created the five-step criteria by which they would be judged – and actually they’re moving in the right direction and we’ve got some significan­t change.

“The taskforce reports back to the Council once or twice a year and each time they come back and say there’s still more to do.

“But some of the challenges that we were being appraised of just a few months earlier have actually moved.

“I am fa it hf ul to t he independen­t work of the taskforce, and the taskforce will recommend to t he cou nci l when that moment of re-integratio­n is.”

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