Calgary Herald

Evidence on doping ‘nonsense,’ Putin says

- The Associated Press

Russian President Vladimir Putin accused U.S. agencies of manipulati­ng evidence from the main whistleblo­wer on doping at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

Putin said Thursday former Moscow anti-doping laboratory director Grigory Rodchenkov — who is under witness protection after fleeing to the United States last year — is “under the control” of the American agencies, including the FBI.

Rodchenkov being in the United States “is not a positive for us, it’s a negative. It means he’s under the control of American special services,” Putin said. “What are they doing with him there? Are they giving him some kind of substances so that he says what’s required?”

Putin added Rodchenkov should never have been appointed to run Moscow’s anti-doping laboratory in the first place.

“It was a mistake on the part of those who did it and I know who did it,” he said, although he didn’t name names or say they should be punished.

Testimony from Rodchenkov played a key role in Internatio­nal Olympic Committee investigat­ions that led last week to Russian athletes being required to compete under a neutral flag at the upcoming PyeongChan­g Games.

Rodchenkov said he was ordered by the sports ministry to oversee steroid use by Russian athletes in many sports and to cover up their doping by falsifying test results and swapping dirty samples for clean ones.

The IOC’s decision to trust Rodchenkov’s evidence is “nonsense,” Putin said, portraying the scientist as mentally unstable and referring repeatedly to Russian criminal investigat­ions against him.

Russia has denied it had any involvemen­t in doping, particular­ly around the Sochi Olympics, its prestige project.

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