Global Times

WADA recommends Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics not use latest sample bottles

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The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said Wednesday it had confirmed that new-generation drug-testing kits could be susceptibl­e to tampering and recommende­d use of an older model at the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics.

“It has been confirmed that a proportion of the new generation BEREG-KIT Geneva security bottles are susceptibl­e to manual opening without evidence of tampering, whether they have been frozen or not,” WADA said in a statement.

With the Winter Games due to open on February 9, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) had asked the agency to look into the matter after a laboratory in Cologne reported the newer bottles could be opened after being frozen.

The glass containers had been touted as the next generation of sample bottles since being released last year, part of the ongoing effort to avoid a repeat of the Russian doping scandal that dogged the 2014 Winter Olympics and still reverberat­es today.

But WADA said the older BEREGKIT 2016 – released for the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro – should be used instead.

“To that end, through its anti-doping partners, WADA has managed to source enough kits of the earlier model to cover the entire testing program in place for Pyeongchan­g,” WADA said.

“At this stage, our clear recommenda­tion to the IOC is that it continues to use the earlier model, which is still used by a number of testing authoritie­s around the world,” WADA Director-General Olivier Niggli added.

“This should be seen as a precaution­ary measure that guarantees the integrity of the doping control process at the Games.”

Niggli said WADA had also contacted anti-doping agencies and WADAaccred­ited labs around the world “to make them aware of the latest situation.”

The agency will continue to work with Berlinger, the Swiss manufactur­er of the bottles, to gather informatio­n and explore solutions.

In the meantime, Niggli said, Berlinger had agreed to resume production of the 2016 model.

In the 2014 Sochi Olympics doping scandal detailed in a report by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren, investigat­ors discovered that Russian staff involved had developed a method to open supposedly “tamper-proof” sample bottles undetected.

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