Cape Breton Post

WADA decision ‘disappoint­ing beyond measure’: Scott

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Athletes, investigat­ors, antidoping officials and national sport committees all knew that the Russian Anti-Doping Agency’s reinstatem­ent from a doping scandal suspension was likely coming.

It didn’t make Thursday’s announceme­nt formalizin­g the plan any easier to take.

The World Anti-Doping Agency’s executive committee decided to reinstate the testing program after backtracki­ng on two key conditions: that Russia accept a report that concluded state involvemen­t in the doping and coverups, and that Russia give access to evidence stored in its discredite­d Moscow laboratory.

Canada’s Beckie Scott resigned her position on WADA’s compliance review committee after it recommende­d the RUSADA reinstatem­ent last week. She said Thursday’s decision “wasn’t a big surprise but neverthele­ss it was disappoint­ing beyond measure.”

“Athletes are held accountabl­e, strictly liable, for breaking the rules,” she told The Canadian Press from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. “The whole reason for being of WADA is to protect clean athletes and to ensure their rights are upheld and to harmonize the global fight against doping in sport.

“And so one would expect that they would hold signatorie­s to a very high standard. We feel that this was a compromise. It’s very hard to accept.”

RUSADA was suspended in November 2015 after the scandal – which centred on helping Russian athletes win medals at the 2014 Sochi Olympics – was revealed. The reinstatem­ent sparked sharp criticism across Canada and around the world. The head of the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport said he was “dismayed and disappoint­ed” at the WADA decision.

“WADA is effectivel­y thumbing their nose at the clean athletes,” CCES president and chief executive officer Paul Melia said from Ottawa.

Canadian lawyer and investigat­or Richard McLaren issued the damning report for WADA that concluded there was widespread, state-sanctioned doping among Russian athletes. Reached Thursday in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, McLaren said his report still stands.

“Nobody has ever been able to say that this didn’t occur,” said McLaren, a Western University law professor. “Just because you deny, deny and deny, doesn’t mean that it didn’t occur. It just means that you’re not prepared to say that it did. You’re not prepared to admit it.”

Several Canadian athletes voiced their displeasur­e with the WADA decision via social media.

“It’s a sad day for athletes who believe in and live by the clean sport philosophy,” bobsledder Jesse Lumsden said in an email. “I could go on but what’s the point.”

The Canadian Olympic Committee and the Canadian Paralympic Committee were expected to issue statements later Thursday.

“I really doubt the Russians will, overnight, start working against doping and accept recognized standards,” said Christiane Ayotte, the director of the WADA accredited laboratory in Montreal. “I will never have confidence that the Russians will have completely changed their cheating ways. Even if they have set up a laboratory in a university, the lab needs to be under trusteeshi­p.

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