The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Global gathering bashes WADA over Russia reinstatem­ent

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WASHINGTON: Global athletes and anti-doping leaders called Wednesday for major reforms of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) after its controvers­ial reinstatem­ent of Russia.

WADA’s move in September after a three-year ban for running a state-sponsored doping scheme has drawn worldwide criticism and calls for urgent reform at the Canada-based global doping watchdog.

“We aren’t just asking for WADA to change. We are asking for systematic and deep change,” said James Carroll, White House Office of National Drug Control Policy deputy director. “We are united in calling for the World Anti-Doping Agency to provide stronger leadership on behalf of clean competitio­n.”

Linda Helleland, Norway’s youth minister and a WADA vice president who opposed Russian reinstatem­ent, was joined in attendance by 14 athletes and antidoping leaders from Australia, Canada, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand, Norway, and the United Kingdom.

“Athletes have started a march, a march for transparen­cy, independen­ce and change,” said Helleland, a contender in next year’s WADA chairmansh­ip election.

Critics say WADA ended Russia’s ban without forcing it to meet stringent standards as originally outlined, a move welcomed by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) but reviled by athletes.

“We need a truly independen­t internatio­nal anti-doping regulator free of conflicts of interest,” tweeted US swim star Katie Ledecky, a five-time Olympic champion who sent a video message to the gathering.

“WADA has failed the athletes,” 2017 world steeplecha­se champion Emma Coburn said. “It has bullied and dishearten­ed athlete voices.”

As British Olympic gold medal cyclist Callum Skinner put it: “WADA and IOC have put autocracy over accountabi­lity and politics over principle. Athletes have woken up and found voice. It’s up to WADA and IOC to start listening and act.”

Russian runner and doping whistleblo­wer Yuliya Stepanova, who with husband Vitaliy Stepanov exposed the Russian doping scheme, said she sees WADA and the IOC as opponents.

“My husband and I are not just fighting doping but are increasing­ly fighting IOC and WADA,” Stepanova told the gathering, according to USADA. “We now know WADA does not follow its own rules, even though athletes are asked to.”

The meeting declared in a statement that “WADA must be reformed to make it stronger and more accountabl­e to clean athletes in order for government­s, the public, and athletes to continue to support and believe in it.”

“Confidence in clean sport is at an all-time low. Athletes and sports fans across the globe have lost confidence in the commitment, resolve, and willingnes­s of WADA to stand up for the ideals upon which it was founded.”

The group called for WADA’s governance structure to be overhauled with active sport leaders not in WADA leadership roles, an inquiry into accusation­s of WADA bullying and intimidati­on, greater effort to respect athlete voices, including athlete executive committee membership­s and transparen­cy for securing all lab data and antidoping samples from Russia.

“Athletes shouldn’t have to shoulder the burden of fixing WADA but here they are, along with national anti-doping leaders, doing WADA’s job for them,” US Anti-Doping Agency chief executive Travis Tygart said. “Today was the tipping point.”

WADA, in a statement, dismissed the meeting as an invitation-only gathering of those disagreein­g with WADA’s decision on Russia.

“We welcome debate on this issue and we promote people’s right to discuss and push for reforms. But unfortunat­ely, it would seem as though only one side of the story was heard in Washington,” WADA said.

WADA said if supporters of the move were there they “would have been able to bring perspectiv­e to the debate, to explain why the decision to reinstate RUSADA, under strict conditions, was the right one for clean sport.”

Edwin Moses, a two-time world and Olympic 400m hurdles champion, said WADA needs less appeasemen­t and more robust anti-doping attitudes.

“We need decisions to be made in a much more transparen­t and open fashion,” Moses said. “We want a radically transforme­d and improved WADA that fulfills its potential... as the policing body of sport not as an extension of the IOC.” -

 ?? - AFP photo ?? US golfer Jordan Spieth plays a tee shot during his fourball match on the second day of the 42nd Ryder Cup at Le Golf National Course at Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France.
- AFP photo US golfer Jordan Spieth plays a tee shot during his fourball match on the second day of the 42nd Ryder Cup at Le Golf National Course at Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France.

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