The National - News

Russian relief as Olympic ban is lifted by the IOC

- Agence France-Presse

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) has lifted a ban against Russia, Moscow officials said yesterday, after the country was barred from the Pyeongchan­g games over state-sponsored doping.

“The rights of the Russian Olympic Committee have been fully restored,” said the president of the Russian Olympic Committee, Alexander Zhukov.

Zhukov said Russia received a letter from the IOC yesterday which confirms that no other Olympic athletes from Russia had tested positive for doping, following two positive Russian drug tests at this month’s Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g.

“All of the doping tests that were conducted on our athletes in the last days of the Olympics were negative,” Zhukov said.

The IOC decided in a meeting Sunday that in such an event the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee would be lifted.

Russia were banned in December from taking part in the 2018 Olympics following revelation­s of widespread doping, though 168 athletes were deemed “clean” and were cleared to go to Pyeongchan­g to compete under the Olympic flag.

The time since the ban on December 5 was “probably some of the most difficult months in the history of Russian sports and the Olympic movement in Russia,” Zhukov said, praising athletes in particular for competing in “difficult conditions.”

“For us today’s decision by the IOC is very important.”

“We are very relieved,” added Russian Olympic Committee vice president Stanislav Pozdnyakov. “A lot of what we did in the last three months of course will not be made public” he said.

“But the main thing is that our athletes... had the opportunit­y to represent... our country” in Korea, despite the team’s neutral status as “Olympic Athletes from Russia.”

Two Russians, curler Alexander Krushelnit­sky and bobsledder Nadezhda Sergeyeva, were kicked out of the Olympics after their doping tests were revealed to be positive, with Krushelnit­sky being stripped of his bronze medal.

The scandal meant that the Olympic team from Russia could not use national colours or flag for the closing ceremony in Pyeongchan­g as originally hoped. Moscow blamed the two cases on “negligence rather than malicious intent,” while Krushelnit­sky denied knowingly doping.

Russia’s Olympic ban followed the uncovering of a doping conspiracy where tainted urine samples were switched with clean ones.

The government has denied any state involvemen­t in the plot but a top sports official Vitaly Mutko, a deputy prime minister, was suspended by the IOC for life.

Russia’s reinstatem­ent in the IOC does not affect the suspended status of its national anti-doping agency (Rusada) with the World Anti-Doping Agency, which on Monday said the country remains non-compliant, citing “proven systemic manipulati­on of the doping control process.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates