The Borneo Post

Athletes’ universal rights ‘will protect from doping fallout’

-

WASHINGTON: The world’s leading players’ associatio­ns unveiled a universal declaratio­n of player rights on Thursday designed to give athletes a global voice and protect them from the fallout from corruption and a broken anti- doping system.

The World Players Associatio­n ( WPA), whose member unions include FIFPro, NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB and which represents more than 85,000 athletes from 60 countries, hailed the declaratio­n as the f irst comprehens­ive articulati­on of athletes’ rights.

Among the 17 articles laid out in the document are an athlete’s right to freedom of opinion and expression, the ability to organise and bargain collective­ly and to have a work place free of discrimina­tion.

Union leaders also made clear that their members needed to be protected from an anti- doping system that is focused on athletes and not on the leagues, federation­s, countries and owners who might support and encourage the use of performanc­e- enhancing drugs.

Brendan Schwab, executive director of the WPA, likened the institutio­nal and state-mandated doping uncovered in Russia by the World Anti-Doping Agency and Internatio­nal Olympic Committee investigat­ions to something close to “subjecting athletes to scientific experiment­ation in pursuit of sporting success”.

The WPA believes that athletes’ rights to a fair trial have often been trampled on in the name of clean sport and a new anti- doping system needs to be developed to protect players rather than victimise them.

“This has occurred under the eyes of an internatio­nal governance system that imposed a very strict and rigid framework which we believe does not respect the fundamenta­l rights of athletes, in terms of the presumptio­n of innocence, in terms of rights for a fair trial, in terms of just and proportion­ate penalties,” said Schwab during a conference call from Washington DC where the document was released.

“We have this inconsiste­ncy of corruption existing under this anti- doping system, yet the fundamenta­l rights of athletes are not being respected.

“We want to devise an antidoping system that respects the fundamenta­l rights but, more importantl­y, is also effective.”

DeMaurice Smith, the of the National Football League Players Associatio­n director, said if sport was truly to rid itself of drugs, anti- doping crusaders needed to look beyond the athlete and what was taking place on the field of play. — Reuters

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on Dec 15, 2015 shows a technician holding blood samples about to be tested at the French national anti-doping laboratory, in Chatenay-Malabry, outside Paris. — AFP photo
This file photo taken on Dec 15, 2015 shows a technician holding blood samples about to be tested at the French national anti-doping laboratory, in Chatenay-Malabry, outside Paris. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia