Kuwait Times

Russia anti-doping boss expects lengthy Olympic ban

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MOSCOW: Russia’s anti-doping chief is predicting a lengthy Olympic ban for the national squad, lashing out at Moscow authoritie­s who he says handed over falsified lab data to internatio­nal investigat­ors.

The accusation­s are the latest scandal to hit Russian sport after the country was banned from competing in several internatio­nal competitio­ns over state-sponsored doping. “Russia’s Olympic squad will be prevented from participat­ing fully in the Olympic Games in Tokyo .... I think that this will also happen at the (Winter Olympic) Games in China,” the head of Russia’s RUSADA agency, Yuri Ganus, told AFP in an exclusive interview.

The best-case scenario in his view is very limited participat­ion “by certain athletes, by invitation”, as happened at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics. He expects other penalties too, including restrictio­ns on holding internatio­nal tournament­s in

Russia, exclusion of Russians from internatio­nal sports federation­s and fines.

In September, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) demanded Russia explain “inconsiste­ncies” in electronic data it handed over which listed results of tests carried out under the laboratory’s previous leadership.

The data handover was supposed to demonstrat­e Russia’s desire for transparen­cy after the scandalous revelation­s that RUSADA facilitate­d state-sponsored doping between 2011 and 2015.

Russian sports minister Pavel Kolobkov sent a letter of explanatio­n to WADA about the data it queried on October 8. But Ganus — who says he has not had access to that letter — suggests the scale of the data manipulati­on is such that these explanatio­ns are likely to be insufficie­nt.

On October 23, WADA’s Compliance Review Committee, which has powers to recommend sanctions, is set to meet experts who have analysed the data and looked at Russia’s explanatio­ns.

The walls of Ganus’s office in central Moscow are covered with posters promoting clean sport and messages of support from counterpar­ts around the world. He insists his organisati­on had nothing to do with the data manipulati­on because it did not have access to the database in question.

He believes that high-ranking officials must have carried out the fraud since the laboratory data was “under the control of Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee.” The powerful agency is leading criminal investigat­ions into laboratory employees who were allegedly involved in state-sponsored doping.

But Ganus wonders what those investigat­ions could hope to achieve now the credibilit­y of authoritie­s has been so undermined in his eyes. He hints that officials may have intervened to protect top athletes from the revelation of their use of doping.

“Whose names were in there? What was there in the data? This data was informatio­n about athletes’ test samples. “Who were the people who were able to infiltrate the Investigat­ive Committee, what state powers did they have? This is extremely serious,” Ganus says. The falsificat­ions took place “on the eve of the transfer (of the data) to WADA”.

Ganus, whose appointmen­t as head of RUSADA in 2017 was supposed to drag Russia out of a morass, now sees the country at a crossroads. “This is a blow to the current generation of athletes and to future generation­s as well,” he says. “It’s a tragedy.”

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