Vancouver Sun

New WADA boss vows to get tough on Russia

- KAROLOS GROHMANN

KATOWICE, POLAND World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) president-elect Witold Banka pledged on Thursday to be tough on Russia if the country is proven to have manipulate­d the doping data of its athletes.

The Polish tourism and sports minister, who was officially appointed as the next WADA president on Thursday, will take over his post on Jan. 1.

“I start my term of office next year. I am waiting for the results of the analyses. If we discover some manipulati­ons, the reaction should be tough,” Banka told a news conference.

For more than four years, Russia has been the focus of several investigat­ions and sanctions after a 2015 WADA-commission­ed report highlighte­d a vast doping network in the country’s sports community.

Russia’s anti-doping agency, RUSADA, was suspended after a 2015 WADA report found vast evidence of state-sponsored doping in Russian athletics. The country has since struggled to restore its internatio­nal credibilit­y in sport.

RUSADA’s suspension was lifted in September 2018 amid strong criticism as WADA gradually obtained access to key Russian athletes’ data from the Russian lab.

But WADA opened compliance proceeding­s again in September after finding inconsiste­ncies in the vast bank of historical testing data finally handed over in January.

The 35-year-old Banka, a former track and field athlete who will succeed Craig Reedie, was the public authoritie­s’ choice for WADA president, as the post rotates between a choice from sports bodies and one from public authoritie­s.

Banka, whose appointmen­t was rubber-stamped by the body’s foundation board on the final day of the World Conference on Doping in Sport, has also pledged to set up a doping fund for corporate sponsors to contribute toward clean sport.

“We have the same objective and goals in our hearts, to clean up sport and create a fair environmen­t,” Banka said in a brief address after a unanimous election.

“I promise you to try to always build bridges with all stakeholde­rs. I am sure together we will make anti-doping systems stronger.”

WADA also approved a revision of its World Anti-Doping Code that will come into force on Jan. 1, 2021, after a two-year consultati­on process.

Among the changes are considerab­ly lower sanctions for using drugs such as marijuana and cocaine that are taken not to enhance performanc­e, but for recreation­al purposes.

Athletes will be banned for weeks instead of years for such an anti-doping rule violation if they can establish that the use of such banned substances was unrelated to their sport performanc­e.

Successful completion of a rehab treatment program can further reduce the suspension.

 ??  ?? Witold Banka
Witold Banka

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