The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ed Moses backs calls for probe into WADA bullying claims

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SYDNEY: Athletics great Ed Moses says he was told to “shut up” at a meeting of world anti-doping chiefs as he backed calls Friday for an investigat­ion into bullying claims at the organisati­on.

Moses, chair of the US Anti-Doping Agency, said a “hostile atmosphere” was “increasing­ly becoming the norm in the global anti-doping cauldron”.

His comments, in an opinion piece in the Sydney Morning Herald, follow allegation­s by Beckie Scott, chair of the World AntiDoping Agency’s Athlete Committee, that she was “bullied” by some WADA officials over her opposition to reinstatin­g Russia’s anti-doping agency.

Scott, a Canadian former Olympic crosscount­ry skiing champion, last month resigned from the panel that recommende­d lifting the ban on RUSADA, which had been declared non-compliant in 2015 after revelation­s of a vast state-backed scheme to avoid drug testers.

Lifting the ban was blasted by many athletes and national anti-doping agencies.

Moses, also a physicist who pioneered the developmen­t of anti-doping policies while working at the US Olympic Committee, said he too had witnessed bullying.

“Unfortunat­ely, Scott is not alone in being attacked for wanting to clean things up,” he said.

“It was only in May, at WADA’s last foundation board meeting, that I was told bluntly by various individual­s not to speak. I was told to shut up.

“This would be offensive if it weren’t so puzzling: why are some officials who purport to represent clean sport trying to muzzle the interventi­ons of others with whom they disagree at internatio­nal antidoping meetings?” WADA could not immediatel­y be reached, but in a statement to the BBC denied twotime Olympic champion Moses has been told to keep quiet.

“Neither Mr Moses nor anyone else was told to ‘shut up’ at the board meeting in May -- had that happened, it would have been reported by media in the room,” it said.

“Indeed, during the course of the meeting, Mr Moses did speak. He delivered his report as the chair of the education committee, for which he was thanked and which was duly and officially noted by the board.”

David Sharpe, the head of Australia’s anti-doping body, ASADA, on Monday said Scott’s allegation­s should be independen­tly investigat­ed, a move that Moses backed.

“Australia’s Sharpe is right to call it out because this inappropri­ate behaviour is long-standing and wholly unacceptab­le,” he said.

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