The Independent on Saturday

New blow to Russian athletics

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VIENNA: World athletics’ governing body decided yesterday to maintain its doping ban on all Russian athletes, leaving the country’s hopes of competing in the Rio Olympics dependent on Olympic chiefs giving a special dispensati­on at a meeting next week.

The council of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) was meeting in Vienna to decide whether to lift the ban after hearing from a task force that significan­t doping problems still existed in Russia. The suspension was first imposed in November and extended in March.

Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko said Russia would definitely react to the decision, news agency Tass reported.

The initial ban, in November, came after a report by an independen­t commission of the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) revealed widespread state-sponsored doping.

A task force led by Norway’s Rune Andersen was set up to monitor progress in reforming Russia’s anti-doping programme, and in March reported that there was “significan­t work to do”.

On Wednesday, Wada released another damning report on doping in Russia, one of the world’s sporting superpower­s, who were second behind the US in the athletics medal table at the 2012 Olympics.

That report revealed 52 new failed tests and stories of extraordin­ary attempts to avoid, obstruct or intimidate drug testers, suggesting that attempts to change the culture of doping in Russia had failed.

The IAAF council had been due to hear from Andersen again yesterday, and from Russian representa­tives.

The federation had scheduled the vote for June so that, if the ban were to be lifted, Russian athletes would have a reasonable chance to register Olympic qualifying standards before the July 11 cut-off.

Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach was asked this month whether the IOC, holding its own Olympic summit on June 21, would be prepared to overrule an IAAF ban and allow Russian athletes to go to Rio. He replied: “I cannot speculate.”

“This meeting on the 21st will be to protect the clean athletes and ensure a level playing field for all the athletes participat­ing in Rio,” he said.

Russian president Vladimir Putin said yesterday that there should be no collective punishment for Russian athletes and that doping should not be politicise­d or used to push an anti-Russian agenda.

And Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia was ready to take legal steps to prevent its athletes being banned en masse.

“Obviously, everything possible needed to defend the rights of our athletes and the Olympic team is being done and will be done at a legal level,” he said.

Russia also revealed an open letter sent to the IAAF by Mutko saying that Russia had met all the conditions asked of it, including overhaulin­g its disgraced athletics associatio­n and introducin­g additional testing.

“Clean athletes who have dedicated years of their lives to training and who never sought to gain unfair advantage through doping should not be punished for the past actions of other individual­s,” Mutko wrote.

“Additional­ly, Russia’s athletes must not be singled out as the ones to be punished for a problem that is widely acknowledg­ed to go far beyond our country’s borders.” – Reuters

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