Millennium Post

WADA to reinstate Russia after doping suspension: statement

-

MONTREAL: The World Antidoping Agency has been given the green light to lift its ban on Russia's drug-tainted testing authority after a recommenda­tion from investigat­ors, the global doping watchdog said.

A WADA statement said its independen­t Compliance Review Committee (CRC) had recommende­d that the Russian Anti-doping Agency (RUSADA) be reinstated when the agency's executive committee meets in the Seychelles on September 20.

The move, which paves the way for Russian athletes to make a full return to competitio­n, came as a surprise. A day earlier, Britain's BBC published a letter from WADA'S compliance committee recommendi­ng that the ban remain in place.

WADA suspended the RUSADA in 2015 after declaring it to be non-compliant following revelation­s of a vast, Moscow-backed scheme to avoid drug testers.

A WADA report by Canadian lawyer Richard Mclaren accused Russian authoritie­s of running an elaborate doping programme with the full support of the Russian Ministry of Sport and the Russian secret service or FSB.

Russian officials had previously concluded that their doping system failed, but refused to acknowledg­e claims of institutio­nal involvemen­t.

Tensions within WADA emerged earlier this year over whether Russia had done enough for the sanction to be

lifted, with some officials arguing it had not completed a "roadmap" to rehabilita­tion.

However WADA'S statement on Friday said its compliance committee had recommende­d reinstatin­g RUSADA after reviewing a letter from the Russian Ministry of Sport.

"This letter sufficient­ly acknowledg­ed the issues identified in Russia, therefore fulfilling the first of the two outstandin­g criteria of RUSADA'S Roadmap to Compliance," WADA said.

It said Russia had also agreed to provide access to data and samples in its Moscow laboratory to WADA via an independen­t expert. But the apparent WADA U-turn was slammed by the United States Anti-doping Agency chief Travis Tygart, who called on the agency to make public evidence Russia had satisfied the criteria for reinstatem­ent.

"Frankly, it stinks to high heaven, WADA should stop the sleight of hand and release the new Compliance Review Committee recommenda­tion as well as any informatio­n received from Russia now showing they are compliant," Tygart said in a statement.

"Today, WADA has unequivoca­lly told the world the type of organizati­on it is: one that supports the desires of a handful of sports administra­tors over the rights of millions of clean ath

letes." Tygart also challenged RUSADA to provide details from tests carried out at its Moscow laboratory.

"If RUSADA are compliant then great, we now have all the data and samples at the Moscow

laboratory and finally justice can be served in the hundreds of cases that have been derailed up to now," Tygart said.

"If not, the fix has obviously been in since the start."

If RUSADA'S reinstatem­ent is approved as expected next week, it could have far-reaching implicatio­ns across the sports world. Most significan­tly, it removes a key obstacle to lifting the suspension of Russia by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF), track and field's global governing body.

The IAAF has taken a hardline stance on Russian athletes since the scandal emerged, refusing to lift its ban shortly before the European Championsh­ips.

The IAAF has said Russia must fulfill three criteria to be readmitted; the reinstatem­ent of RUSADA, provide access to doping records at the agency's Moscow laboratory from 20112015, and payment of costs incurred by the IAAF in the wake of the scandal.

The IAAF will review Russia's status once more at its council meeting in Monaco in December.

On Thursday, a group of British athletes had called on WADA to resist pressure to lift the ban, asserting that Russia was not in compliance.

The UK Anti-doping Athlete Commission said in a letter to WADA chief Craig Reedie that Russian readmissio­n would be a "a catastroph­e for clean sport."

Clear divisions within WADA came into the open at its board meeting in Montreal in May, where members from individual sporting bodies called for the ban to be lifted.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India