The Borneo Post

How Russian doping scandal unfolded

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MONACO: The IAAF, track and field’s governing body, on Tuesday extended its ban on the Russian athletics federation, first put in place in November 2015.

Here are the main events in the long- running Russian doping controvers­y: - December 2014 - German broadcaste­r ARD airs documentar­y al leging systematic doping in Russian athletics. A week later, Russian athletics chief and the treasurer of world athletics body IAAF, Valentin Balakhnich­ev, and IAAF marketing consultant Pape Massata Diack, son of thenIAAF president Lamine Diack, step down.

The World Anti-Doping Agency ( WADA) sets up an independen­t commission headed by its former chief, Dick Pound, to investigat­e the claims. - August 2015 - ARD airs a second do cument a r y wit h new accusation­s aimed at Russian and Kenyan athletes based on a leaked IAAF database with details of 12,000 blood tests from 5,000 competitor­s which revealed “extraordin­ary” levels of doping. - November 2015 - WADA’s repor t cal l s on Russia’s track and field team to be banned from internatio­nal competitio­n, including from the 2016 Rio Olympics, until “statespons­ored” doping is eradicated. The IAAF suspends the Russian athletics team. WADA also suspends Russia’s national antidoping body, RUSADA, over noncomplia­nce. - January 2016 - WADA’s second report into doping and corrupt ion i s published. It says high-ranking IAAF officials must have known about the wide scope of doping. - May 2016 - Grigory Rodchenkov, the former head of Moscow’s antidoping laboratory, goes public with details about an organised Russian doping campaign at the 2014 Sochi Olympics. - July 2016 - Barely two weeks before the Rio Olympics, Canadian law professor Richard McLaren releases an explosive report for WADA outlining state-run Russian doping at Sochi Games and other major sports events. WADA calls for Russia to be banned from Rio.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ( IOC) stops short of an outright ban and says individual sports federation­s will have to decide whether to allow Russian athletes. - December 2016 - Second part of McLaren report is published, alleging state-sponsored Russian doping between 2011 and 2015, with sample- tampering at the 2012 London Olympics and Sochi 2014, where Russia topped the medals table. - December 2017 - Vitaly Mutko, Russia’s deputy prime minister, uses a speech before the draw for the 2018 World Cup in Russia to slam doping allegation­s as “an attempt to create an image of an axis of evil”.

Following its own investigat­ions, the IOC bans the Russian Olympic Committee from the Pyeongchan­g Games but says clean Russian athletes will be able to take part as neutral competitor­s. Mutko receives a lifetime Olympic ban. - January 2018 - Some 168 Russian athletes are cleared by the IOC to take part in the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics. - May 2018 - Mutko loses his sports brief in a new government announced less than one month before the start of the Russia-hosted World Cup. - September 2018 - WADA controvers­ially lifts its three-year ban on RUSADA, despite not having been granted access to its Moscow laboratory. The Court of Arbitratio­n of Sport (CAS) then registers an appeal by the Russian athletics federation ( RUSAF) against its suspension by IAAF. - December 2018 - Russian sports of f icials announce that WADA experts will return to Moscow next week to conduct an audit of RUSADA.

IAAF extends its ban on the RUSAF, the ninth time since the initial suspension, saying certain criteria for reintegrat­ion had not been met. — AFP

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