Deccan Chronicle

Russia escapes ban but strict code for athletes

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Lausanne, July 24: The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee will not impose a blanket ban on Russia for next month’s Rio Olympics over the nation’s doping record but will leave decisions on individual athletes’ participat­ion to the relevant sports federation­s.

The IOC’s announceme­nt follows the World Anti-Doping Agency’s call for a Rio ban in response to the independen­t McLaren report that found evidence of widespread state-sponsored doping by Russian athletes at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The world governing body’s ruling 15-member executive board met on Sunday via teleconfer­ence — with the Rio Games’ August 5 opening ceremony less than two weeks away — and decided that responsibi­lity for ruling on the eligibilit­y of Russians remains with the internatio­nal federation­s.

While calls had been growing for a blanket ban after the damning evidence in the McLaren report, the IOC said that Russians would be able to participat­e if cleared by their respective internatio­nal federation­s.

“Under these exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, Russian athletes in any of the 28 Olympic summer sports have to assume the consequenc­es of what amounts to a collective responsibi­lity in order to protect the credibilit­y of the Olympic competitio­ns, and the ‘presumptio­n of innocence’ cannot be applied to them,” the IOC said.

However, the IOC added that the rules of natural justice mean that each athlete must be given the opportunit­y to show that such collective responsibi­lity is not applicable in his or her individual case.

Spotless Required

For individual­s to be excluded from the “collective responsibi­lity” they must have a spotless internatio­nal records on drug testing, the IOC said, adding that no athlete who has been sanctioned for doping will be eligible to compete in Rio.

That would include middle-distance runner Yulia Stepanova, the whistleblo­wer and former drug cheat whose initial evidence led to one of the biggest doping scandals in decades.

The report produced by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren described extensive doping and cover-ups across a series of summer and winter Olympic sports and particular­ly at the Sochi Winter Olympics Record hosted by Russia in 2014.

The IOC said this week that it would not organise or give patronage to any sports event in Russia, including the planned 2019 European Games, and that no member of the Russian sports ministry implicated in the report would be accredited for Rio.

It had also ordered the immediate re-testing of all Russian athletes from the Sochi Olympics and instructed internatio­nal winter sports federation­s to halt preparatio­ns for major events in Russia.

“It would be quite difficult for us to think we should ban an entire team, which will include some cyclists who are not implicated in any of these stories we’ve been hearing,” said Brian Cookson, president of the Internatio­nal Cycling Union.— Reuters

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