Russian hopes in peril after drug agency criticism
SEOUL, South Korea — The World Anti-Doping Agency placed Russia’s fate for the upcoming Winter Olympics on perilous ground, refusing to reinstate the country’s suspended anti-doping operation while Russia remained insistent the government is not to blame.
At its meeting Thursday in South Korea, WADA handed Russia the equivalent of a failing grade, saying two key requirements for reinstating the Russian Anti-Doping Agency had not been fulfilled:
Russia must publicly accept results of an investigation by Canada’s Richard McLaren that concluded the country ran a state-sponsored doping program.
Russia must allow access to urine samples collected during the time of the cheating.
“We can’t walk away from the commitments,” said Craig Reedie, the chairman of WADA and also a member of the International Olympic Committee, which will ultimately decide Russia’s fate.
Reedie refused to be drawn in on what impact Thursday’s decision might have on the IOC.
“We do not have the right to decide who takes part in international competition,” he said. “I am quite certain that the IOC would prefer that RUSADA was compliant.”
The IOC said its executive board, due to meet Dec. 5-7, “will take all the circumstances, including all the measures to ensure a level playing field at the Olympic Winter Games 2018, into consideration when it decides on the participation of the Russian athletes.”
Among those circumstances will be Russia’s continued denial that a state-sponsored program existed.
Leaders in the country have depicted the doping program that marred the 2014 Games in Sochi as the work of individuals, not the government.