Millennium Post

19 countries demand sports ban on Russia

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MOSCOW: The National Anti-doping Organisati­ons (NADO) of 19 countries have demanded a ban on Russian athletes from all internatio­nal sports competitio­ns as well as to strip the country of the right to host global tournament­s.

The proposal comes in the wake of the World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) Independen­t Commission’s report about the allegedly mass doping abuse and manipulati­ons in Russian sports.

“Following the devastatin­g evidence of wide-spread systemic corruption exposed by the report, leaders from 19 National Anti-doping Organisati­ons (NADOS) came together for a special summit, hosted by Sport Ireland, with hopes to restore the faith of clean athletes and to ensure that the integrity of sport is never again brought into such disrepute,” a statement from NADOS said on Tuesday.

The document was signed by anti-doping leaders of Austria, Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Japan, the Netherland­s, Poland, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerlan­d, and the United States.

“With new, irrefutabl­e evidence of Russia’s institutio­nalised doping system uncovered by Mclaren and his team, the leadership group has called for the exclusion of Russian sport organisati­ons from all internatio­nal competitio­n until the sport and anti-doping systems in Russia are brought into full compliance with the World Anti-doping Code,” the statement added.

“The leaders (of NADOS) have also called for IFS (Internatio­nal Federation­s) and other major event organisers to remove all internatio­nal competitio­ns currently set to take place in Russia, as well as a moratorium on awarding any new competitio­ns to the country.”

According to the WADA report, delivered early last month in London by its independen­t commission and its chairman, Canadian sports law professor Richard Mclaren, over 1,000 Russian athletes competing in summer, winter and Paralympic sports could have been involved in the manipulati­ons system to conceal positive doping tests.

Mclaren’s report claimed in particular that doping samples of 12 Russian medallists of 2014 Winter Games in Sochi had been tampered with. In addition, doping tests of two more Russian athletes, who won four gold medals of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi had been falsified as well.

The report did not mention particular names and Mclaren later said that the decision against making public the names of athletes, who are allegedly guilty of doping abuse, was made in respect to their private life, and, moreover, it should be done by internatio­nal sports federation­s and not him personally.

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