The Borneo Post

Athletes have duty to report doping offences, says McLaren

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EINDHOVEN, Netherland­s: The author of the independen­t World Anti- Doping Agency report that uncovered evidence of institutio­nal is ed do ping in Russian sport said on Tuesday that athletes should be dutybound to report cases where they know of drug use by others.

Canadian law professor Richard McLaren said the system could be model led on rules governing matchfixin­g where failing to report knowledge of a case in many sports is an offence.

However, McLaren, speaking at the ‘ Play the Game’ sports conference, said sports federation­s would also have to build up trust with the athletes for it to work.

“Athletes need to speak up, they are on the front line and I think it’s time we considered putting a duty ( on them) to report corrupt activity,” he said. “We can only do that if everyone can be confident that it can be done in confidence.”

“If you are going to encourage people to come forward and speak up, we must have strict and rigorous confidenti­ality. That trust must be establishe­d. They ( athletes) must be convinced that they can be and will be protected.”

Speaking to reporters afterwards, McLaren said the duty could be included in “the athletes’ contract with their sport.

“In match-fixing, it’ s a requiremen­t and something similar could be done with respect to doping issues.”

However, he conceded that, in match-fixing, athletes often turned a blind eye to wrongdoing by colleagues despite facing bans for doing so.

“I know very well the culture to keep it in the locker room,” he said. “That would be a problem, but if you conduct better education and you build trust relationsh­ips with the sport, it can work.”

“It’s not a perfect solution but it’s better than what we have now,” he said.

McLaren added that, having obtained the informatio­n, sports federation­s then had a duty to conduct a proper investigat­ion – something that often did not happen.

“The informatio­n flows into these organisati­ons, disappears and then is never acted on,” he said.

McLaren’s WADA-commission­ed report published last year found that more than 1,000 Russian competitor­s in over 30 sports were involved in a conspiracy to conceal positive drug tests over a period of five years.

Russia, which has always denied state-sponsored doping, has refused to accept all the report’s findings. — Reuters

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