Millennium Post

Former WADA chief Pound calls for tough stance on Russian doping

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LOS ANGELES: Former World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) chief Dick Pound has called for a tough stance on Russia’s doping violations as the sports world braces for the release of a new investigat­ion into accusation­s of state-run cheating.

Pound, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s representa­tive on the WADA Foundation Board, said firm action against Russia was necessary to deter other nations from widespread doping.

“I think if we are sufficient­ly firm with Russia, there will be an enormous deterrent effect,” Pound said in a widerangin­g interview ahead of the December 9 release of a report by Canadian law professor Richard Mclaren expected to shine more light on doping in Russia.

The first part of the Mclaren report, commission­ed by WADA after revelation­s by the former head of the Moscow anti-doping laboratory, was published in July and detailed an elaborate state-sponsored scheme in Russia to manipulate drug tests at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s.

Publicatio­n of the report plunged the Olympic movement into chaos on the eve of the Rio de Janeiro Games, with the IOC and WADA at loggerhead­s over how best to sanction the Russian Olympic Committee.

Pound believes the IOC’S failure to impose a blanket ban on Russia from Rio represente­d a missed opportunit­y, and undermined the organizati­on’s repeated pledges of a “zero tolerance” policy on doping.

“You can’t have a mantra like the IOC does of ‘zero tolerance for doping’ which means ‘zero tolerance for doping - unless it’s Russia, because Russia is a big and important country,” Pound said. “There was an opportunit­y to send the message by saying ‘no matter who you are, how important is your country, if you cheat, there will be consequenc­es’. The IOC is nothing if it has no ethical principles, it is always hoped to be the ethical leader of sport, here was a chance to demonstrat­e that.”

The IOC ultimately left it up to internatio­nal sports federation­s to determine whether or not they would allow Russian athletes to take part in Rio, a decision which drew stinging criticism from anti-doping officials.

Pound said WADA should be given the authority to impose its own sanctions on countries deemed to have broken antidoping rules, with the right of appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport. “We have a very good system in place, what we do not have is a commitment of the people in that system to make it work,” Pound said.

Pound meanwhile said Russia’s rehabilita­tion after a year of sensationa­l doping revelation­s could only take place if Moscow acknowledg­ed the extent of the problem.

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