The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A shadow over the Games

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According to a recently released report from the World Anti-Doping Agency, Russia’s government ran a “systematic scheme” to infuse the Russian team with performanc­eenhancing drugs and to cover up that cheating, before, during and after the 2014 Winter Olympics, which Russia hosted. This follows a previous report by the same agency documentin­g rampant doping among Russia’s track and field athletes.

And now, with less than two weeks to go before the 2016 Summer Olympics get underway in Rio de Janeiro, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has announced Russia’s punishment: an ever-so-gentle slap on the wrist.

Instead of an outright ban on Russian participat­ion, as the World Anti-Doping Agency had urged, the IOC will impose a convoluted case-by-case review of Russian athletes, carried out by the 28 internatio­nal federation­s that govern each Olympic sport. Athletes will have to overcome a presumptio­n of guilt, but given the limited time left before the Games, and the influence Moscow can bring to bear, overtly and otherwise, on the various federation­s, this is a dragnet through which many Russians will slip. Here’s all you need to know about what a cop-out the IOC has committed: Moscow’s minister of sport reacted positively to the ruling, proclaimin­g that most Russian athletes will indeed qualify to participat­e — and march into Rio under the Russian flag.

To be sure, officials have barred the vast majority of applicants from Russia’s tainted track and field team. Yet the banned athletes include Yulia Stepanova, who blew the whistle on her country’s cheating. Stepanova had asked to compete not on Russia’s behalf, but as a neutral, stateless athlete; officials said no because she had a past drug violation. No matter that this resulted from a system that put pressure on her to dope, and that she had the courage to speak out against it later, at tremendous risk to her career — and, in Vladimir Putin’s police state, her life.

This ethically warped performanc­e by the panjandrum­s of the internatio­nal Olympic “movement” casts a dark shadow indeed over the Rio proceeding­s. We say that not so much out of concern for the results of the Games themselves, which are bound to provide the usual portion of thrills, chills — and accusation­s of various transgress­ions by participan­ts and officials. Rather, Moscow’s evasion of meaningful accountabi­lity makes a mockery of the high ideals for which the Olympics purportedl­y stand and can only reinforce the sense of impunity with which the Putin regime approaches internatio­nal norms in areas far more consequent­ial than sports. Editorial courtesy of The Washington Post.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russia’s national Olympic team members rest as they wait to attend a religion service in the Assumption Cathedral at the Kremlin, in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday during a reception for the Russia’s Olympics team. At least 105 athletes from the 387-strong...
ASSOCIATED PRESS Russia’s national Olympic team members rest as they wait to attend a religion service in the Assumption Cathedral at the Kremlin, in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday during a reception for the Russia’s Olympics team. At least 105 athletes from the 387-strong...

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