The Star Malaysia

WADA experts hold talks over doping ban data

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MOSCOW: A delegation from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) arrived for talks yesterday with Russian authoritie­s in Moscow as they try to access data which could mean more bans for top Russian athletes who cheated in past years.

The delegation will visit the Moscow laboratory at the heart of a vast cover-up of Russian doping cases as they try to figure out how to obtain computer data.

Russia must provide the data before Dec 31 or risk having their national anti-doping agency suspended again, two months after their controvers­ial reinstatem­ent.

“We are very pleased to be here in Russia for this important meeting,” WADA’s top science official Olivier Rabin said. “We believe it’s a sign that we are making progress in our discussion­s with the Russian authoritie­s.” WADA have found extensive evidence that Russia routinely falsified drug-testing results, including at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, but must now hope the Russian authoritie­s provide genuine data this time. Russia must also submit athletes’ stored samples for analysis by June 30. Jim Walden, the lawyer for former lab director and WADA whistleblo­wer Grigory Rodchenkov, told The Associated Press he expects Russia to either hold back the data or provide false informatio­n. “I would posit that there is zero chance that Russia will give access to the backup data for the computers that were used during Sochi, and the lab equipment and the stored samples,” he said on Tuesday. “So the central question’s going to be: when the Russians refuse what will WADA do? And if they it capitulate again, then unfortunat­ely the world would know that Russia really was successful at killing anti-doping.” Walden added: “I think there is a substantia­l provide anything chance it that all, it if will Russia be doctored.” WADA are not expected to return with the data after yesterday’s visit, which aims to set a procedure for a second team to arrive and collect the files. “Today we are not having any access to any data,” Rabin said. “We are explaining what we expect and we are discussing with our Russian colleagues what they expect as well from this technical visit in December.” Any data can be checked against an unauthoris­ed copy of the lab’s database which WADA obtained last year in unclear circumstan­ces. Walden says Rodchenkov – who is under witness protection in the United States – played no role in obtaining that data and says WADA’s confidenti­al source was likely “someone who was still in the lab.”

If Russia does re-suspend the Russian agency, known as RUSADA, new rules mean that could severely obstruct Russia’s ability to host major sports events.

The previous RUSADA suspension didn’t stop Russia from holding this year’s football World Cup, when FIFA excluded all Russians from any role in collecting players’ drug-testing samples. — AP

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