Arab Times

India plans WADA appeal for early test lab ‘reinstatem­ent’

‘Pre-Oly testing will continue as planned’

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MUMBAI, Aug 24, (RTRS): India’s dope testing laboratory has already addressed most of the concerns raised by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) about its standards and will apply within three weeks for its early reinstatem­ent, a key government official told Reuters on Friday.

WADA said on Thursday the New Delhi-based National Dope Testing Laboratory (NDTL) has been suspended for up to six months for not conforming to internatio­nal standards.

The suspension prohibits the NDTL from carrying out any antidoping activities, including all analyses of urine and blood samples.

The WADA said NDTL could apply for early reinstatem­ent if it satisfied its Laboratory Expert Group that it has addressed the issues.

Radhey Shyam Julaniya, India’s sports secretary, said WADA had visited the laboratory last September.

“WADA pointed out the deficienci­es in September 2018,” Julaniya, who also serves as the NDTL’s chief executive, told Reuters.

“The deficienci­es have already been sorted out, complied with and overcome, and WADA was satisfied in 90% of the cases,” he said.

“They wanted some more informatio­n and wanted validation through an internatio­nal experts’ visit. They have not been able to allot time and visit and said they will do it sometime in January next year.

“We explained we now have a fulltime director, full employee strength and our performanc­e is at par with any other country so send your team to take a decision. I told them ‘you are administer­ing medicine when the disease has been cured.’”

During the suspension, which took effect on Tuesday, any samples not yet tested or undergoing a confirmati­on procedure will be moved to another WADA-accredited laboratory.

According to the World Anti-Doping Code, the laboratory has the option to appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport against the WADA decision.

“We are taking legal opinion while preparing all the extra paperwork WADA asked for,” said Julaniya, who refused to call the WADA decision a setback.

“It generally takes four months for the paperwork but we will prepare it in three weeks and send.”

India’s National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) is confident the world body’s decision would not hamper the country’s fight against doping with the next Olympic Games in Tokyo less than a year away.

“The anti-doping programme of NADA does not get effected,” NADA director general Navin Agarwal said in an email. “The pre-Olympic testing will continue as planned.”

Julaniya said laboratori­es in some European countries charge four times, and in some cases 10 times, more than what testing a sample at the NDTL costs.

He said the NDTL was encouragin­g “more and more” East European and African nations to test their athletes’ samples in India.

“Informally they wanted that we should have a different rate for internatio­nal samples and for national athletes,” Julaniya said, ruing that India does not have a representa­tion on the WADA board, something they want to fix in the near future.

“We took the position that if our rates are lower, the other laboratori­es should reduce their rates rather than us increasing because this is a service and not a business.

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Julaniya

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