New Straits Times

WADA granted access to lab and secret data

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TORONTO: The World Anti-Doping Agency said on Friday an inspection team will be given access to a Moscow laboratory and data it has long demanded thereby removing the final obstacle to the Russian Anti-Doping Agency’s (RUSADA) full reinstatem­ent.

A five-person WADA delegation will travel to Moscow and be allowed to enter the laboratory and have access to samples and other raw data that threatened to derail RUSADA’s conditiona­l reinstatem­ent if not handed over by the end of the year.

Access to the lab and data within that timeframe was a condition of WADA’s September decision to reinstate RUSADA. The Russian authoritie­s must also ensure that any re-analysis of samples required by WADA following the review of the laboratory data is completed no later than June 30 2019.

“Gaining full access to the laboratory and the data contained within it was the reason behind the Sept 20 decision (to reinstate RUSADA) and it is satisfying that we are another step closer to realising that,” WADA Director General Olivier Niggli said in a statement on Friday.

“The raw data is the missing piece of the puzzle that will complement the duplicate LIMS (Laboratory Informatio­n Management System) database that is already in WADA’s possession and help conclude WADA’s McLaren and Operation LIMS investigat­ions.”

The WADA team led by independen­t expert Jose Antonio Pascual, a Spanish research scientist and academic with 30 years’ experience in anti-doping, is expected to require three days to complete the data extraction.

That informatio­n will be used in conjunctio­n with the re-analysis of samples to build cases against athletes who cheated.

The decision to open up the Moscow lab could mark the end of the long-running doping scandal that began in 2015 and rocked the sporting world, peventing Russian athletes from competing in two Olympics and world championsh­ips.

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.

WADA had set a Dec 31 deadline for RUSADA to meet the condition or once again be found non-compliant and face even tougher sanctions laid out in the Internatio­nal Standard for Code Compliance by Signatorie­s.

Russia was banned from this year’s Pyeongchan­g Winter Games but some athletes were allowed to compete as an ‘Olympic Athlete of Russia’, as long as they satisfied strict conditions that showed they had a doping-free background.

A limited number of Russian athletes competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro under their own flag but only after they met strict criteria,

including a clean doping past and sufficient testing at internatio­nal events.

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) has, however, yet to reinstate the Russian Athletics Federation (RusAF).

The IAAF this month voted to continue its doping-related ban of the RusAF, which has been in place since 2015, until there is full access to the doping data stored in Moscow and financial compensati­on for investigat­ion and legal costs.

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