Arab Times

Russia again faces ban after non-compliant recommenda­tion

World Athletics also considerin­g stripping Russia’s membership

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MONTREAL, Nov 23, (AP): World anti-doping regulators are recommendi­ng Russia be declared non-compliant again, setting up a showdown that could make the country ineligible for next summer’s Olympics.

The World Anti-Doping Agency announced Friday that its compliance and review committee made the recommenda­tion after reviewing a case involving manipulate­d data from the Moscow anti-doping lab that was being used to prosecute cases.

The WADA executive committee will discuss the recommenda­tion at a meeting Dec 9, and if it agrees, it will set in motion a process that could end with Russia being booted from the Tokyo Games.

Under new rules created in the aftermath of the Russian doping scandal that marred the Sochi Olympics in 2014, the Russians could appeal any sanction to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee would have to abide by the decisions from WADA or the court, though its President, Thomas Bach, said earlier this week he was not in favor of a total ban.

The text of the rules currently in place say that in the case of a “critical” violation, the likes of which is confrontin­g Russia: “The athletes ... representi­ng that country ... will be excluded from participat­ion in or attendance at the Olympic Games ... for the next edition of that event, or until reinstatem­ent (whichever is longer).”

At the last Winter Games, the IOC banned Russia as a country but allowed 168 Russian athletes to compete under the banner “Olympic Athlete from Russia.” A similar arrangemen­t could be made for Tokyo.

The news, delivered late Friday, came only hours after track’s governing body said it was reviewing whether to continue with such an arrangemen­t in that sport after new charges that senior officials in the country’s track federation faked medical records.

World Athletics is also considerin­g stripping Russia’s membership. President Sebastian Coe said “we need to deal with renegade factions like this.”

In the WADA case, the sanction would be directed at Russia’s anti-doping agency, which has been revamped in the wake of a scandal that investigat­ors showed was directed by government authoritie­s.

RUSADA’s current leader, Yuri Ganus, has been bracing for such a decision and urging his own government to come clean, and help stamp out the embers of a scandal that has gone on for 5 years and now threatens an entirely new generation of athletes.

WADA lifted RUSADA’s earlier suspension as part of an agreement that it would receive the data, only to later discover it had been tampered with, and that the tampering did not appear random.

WADA said it had built more than 40 cases based on data that had not been tampered with, and corroborat­ed informatio­n brought to the agency via whistleblo­wers who unearthed the case.

The scheme was designed to allow Russian athletes to dope without getting caught by substituti­ng urine samples taken at the Sochi Games with clean ones stored from earlier.

Russia is again facing a possible Olympic ban after the World AntiDoping Agency’s Compliance Review Committee (CRC) recommende­d on Friday that the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) be ruled noncomplia­nt.

The CRC put forward the recommenda­tion after WADA’s Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ions Committee found evidence of manipulati­on of data retrieved from a tainted Moscow laboratory in January.

A report along with the recommenda­tion has been sent to the WADA executive committee which will discuss the findings at a meeting in Paris on Dec 9.

If ruled non-compliant, Russia could be excluded from next year’s Tokyo Olympics.

As punishment for failing to respond to the doping crisis, Russia was banned from the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics although its athletes were allowed to compete as neutrals under the Olympic flag.

Russia found itself again under the doping microscope when WADA revealed in September historical data supplied by the country’s anti-doping authority contained “inconsiste­ncies” that resulted in a decision to open a formal compliance procedure.

The non-compliant recommenda­tion is the latest twist in the longrunnin­g doping saga that stretches back to 2015 when RUSADA was first suspended after a WADA-commission­ed report outlined evidence of systematic, state-backed doping in Russian athletics.

Another report the following year documented more than 1,000 doping cases across dozens of sports, notably at the Winter Olympics which Russia hosted in Sochi in 2014.

‘We need to deal with renegade factions this’ like

 ??  ?? In this Oct 2, 2019 file photo, Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach speaks at the opening of the executive board meeting of the IOC at the Olympic House in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d. The incoming leader of the World Anti-Doping Agency asked for more money. The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said ‘yes’. IOC President Thomas Bach pledged $10 million to fight doping in sports, half of which would go toward storing samples from pre-Olympics testing for 10 years and the other half toward investigat­ions and research. (AP)
In this Oct 2, 2019 file photo, Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach speaks at the opening of the executive board meeting of the IOC at the Olympic House in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d. The incoming leader of the World Anti-Doping Agency asked for more money. The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said ‘yes’. IOC President Thomas Bach pledged $10 million to fight doping in sports, half of which would go toward storing samples from pre-Olympics testing for 10 years and the other half toward investigat­ions and research. (AP)

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