National Post (National Edition)

WADA draws scorn with ‘atrocious’ Russia decision

Clean athletes slam reversal of ban over doping

- Gregory Strong

The head of the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport said he was “dismayed and disappoint­ed” at the World Anti-doping Agency’s decision to reinstate Russia on Thursday, ending a nearly threeyear suspension of the country’s drug-testing program because of a state-sponsored doping scheme.

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

WADA decided to reinstate Russia 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.

“I think it’s terrible,” said Canadian curler Chelsea Carey. “I think that it absolutely is wrong for them to reinstate them without having gone through the process that they were supposed to go through. Even then, I’m not sure that it was enough.

“I think it’s atrocious, but unfortunat­ely I’m not terribly surprised.”

Canada’s Beckie Scott resigned her position on WADA’S compliance review committee after it recommende­d the Russian Antidoping Agency’s reinstatem­ent last week. She still leads the WADA athletes’ group.

Christiane Ayotte, the director of the Wada-accredited laboratory in Montreal, said she wasn’t surprised by the WADA executive committee decision but can understand the disappoint­ment.

“I really doubt the Russians will, overnight, start working against doping and accept recognized standards,” she said. “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.

“I am going to try, as best I can, to make sure nobody helps them become once again the cheats they used to be.”

RUSADA was suspended after the doping scandal, which centred on helping Russian athletes win medals at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, was revealed. The reinstatem­ent developmen­t has sparked criticism from athletes and anti-doping officials across Canada and around the world.

“I was certainly dismayed and disappoint­ed,” Melia told The Canadian Press from Ottawa. “It’s making me very disillusio­ned about the IOC and WADA’S commitment to clean sport and clean athletes and the integrity of sport.

“I just can’t believe that WADA would somehow rationaliz­e their way to reinstatin­g Russia even though they haven’t fulfilled the Russia roadmap, in particular those two criteria that were outstandin­g.”

A Canadian Olympic Committee spokesman said the COC planned to issue a statement later Thursday. A message left with the Canadian Paralympic Committee was not immediatel­y returned.

Russia’s Olympic committee was brought back into the fold after the Pyeongchan­g Olympics last February in South Korea. Athletes who could prove they were clean were able to compete at the Games as “Olympic Athletes from Russia.”

“They’re completely taking away the punishment for the associatio­n,” Carey said from Calgary. “They’ve just undone any good that they did by banning — quote, unquote ‘banning’ — the associatio­n from the last Olympics.”

Canada was third in the medal standings in Pyeongchan­g with 29 (11 gold, eight silver and 10 bronze), finishing behind Norway (39) and Germany (31). Olympic Athletes from Russia and host South Korea were tied for sixth place overall with 17 medals.

“Obviously, Russia and the IOC have convinced WADA to change their mind on the roadmap and those criteria, so it proves that WADA is not able to act independen­tly,” Melia said. “It means that going forward the clean athletes, the anti-doping agencies, the government­s of the world have to demand a reform to the governing structure of WADA because that executive committee is just a puppet of the IOC.

“That has to change going forward or we really don’t have an effective internatio­nal regulator for the code.”

In Pyeongchan­g, Russian curler Alexander Krushelnit­sky tested positive for the banned substance meldonium, which is believed to help blood circulatio­n. He gave his medal back after winning mixed doubles bronze with his wife, Anastasia Bryzgalova.

Canada’s Kaitlyn Lawes and John Morris won gold in the mixed doubles competitio­n.

IWAS CERTAINLY DISMAYED AND DISAPPOINT­ED.

 ?? DAVID BLOOM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Canadian curler Chelsea Carey is among a group of Canadian athletes disillusio­ned by WADA’S decision to reinstate Russia on Thursday. “I think it’s terrible,” said Carey.
DAVID BLOOM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Canadian curler Chelsea Carey is among a group of Canadian athletes disillusio­ned by WADA’S decision to reinstate Russia on Thursday. “I think it’s terrible,” said Carey.

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