The Sunday Guardian

WADA denied Moscow lab data access, leaving Russia facing ban again

- STEVE KEATING TORONTO

Russia’s Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) is again on the verge of suspension after a World Anti-Doping Agency inspection team visiting a Moscow laboratory was denied access to raw data to complete its full reinstatem­ent, WADA said on Friday.

The five-member WADA team had spent a week in Russia but left the Moscow lab and returned home frustrated and without having retrieved any of the data in the Laboratory Informatio­n Management System (LIMS) it had been promised access to. If RUSADA is found to be non-compliant Russian athletes could again be on the out- side looking in with another Olympics approachin­g in Tokyo in 2020.

Russian authoritie­s said that the inspection team’s equipment was not certified under Russian law. Access to the lab and data was a condition of WADA’s September decision to reinstate RUSADA.

The inspection team will now prepare a formal report which will be sent to the independen­t Compliance Review Committee (CRC). The CRC will meet on Jan 14-15 when RUSADA’s code compliance status will again be considered.

The CRC’s recommenda­tion will then be considered by the WADA executive committee.

WADA had set a 31 Dec. deadline for RUSADA to meet the condition or once again be found non-com- pliant and face even tougher sanctions laid out in the Internatio­nal Standard for Code Compliance by Signatorie­s. RUSADA was suspended in 2015 after a WADA-commission­ed report outlined evidence of massive state-backed, systematic doping in Russian athletics, allegation­s Moscow has denied.

Russian authoritie­s, at first, downplayed the latest crisis with Russian Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov describing the problems in a TASS report as “technical is- sues”.

Kolobkov added: “The experts are satisfied with the visit,” and said there were plans for a follow-up visit to the lab.

However, the head of RUSADA, Yuri Ganus, said on Saturday that if WADA experts fail to obtain the Moscow lab data before the deadline, this would be “destructiv­e” for the Russian sport.

“I want to stress that it is in Russia’s interests, first, to provide the data, it is in our national interests,” Ganus told TASS.

WADA told Reuters there were no more visits planned but that the team of experts would remain on standby ready to proceed with full data extraction should the matter be resolved. REUTERS

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