Gulf Today

Wada better positioned to wipe out drug cheats, says chief

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MONTRÉAL: Outgoing Wada President Craig Reedie says the Russian doping scandal shows that clean sport is under attack, but the antidoping organizati­on now has the tools to better weed out drug cheats.

Taking stock of his six years at the helm of the World Anti-doping Agency, the 78-year-old Briton insists the group is “stronger” than ever as it faces the “unpreceden­ted” challenge of the doping crisis in Russia.

“Considerin­g the last six years in particular, I am especially pleased to see how Wada responded to the challenges it faced since 2014, in particular the Russian doping crisis,” he said in his end-of-term message. The crisis, he recalled, led to the creation within Wada of an “intelligen­ce and investigat­ions” service, which played “a decisive role” in the recent decision to exclude Russia from major world sports competitio­ns for falsifying anti-doping data.

The Russian anti-doping agency Rusada announced Friday that it has challenged the exclusion.

Ultimately, it will be up to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport to rule on the matter, said Reedie, whose term officially ends Tuesday.

“Throughout this process Wada has shown it has the will, the expertise and the legal tools to stand up effectivel­y to this unpreceden­ted level of cheating and corruption,” he said.

Wada decided on Dec.9 to ban Russia from participat­ing in major internatio­nal events for four years, including the 2020 and 2022 Olympic Games and the 2022 World Cup.

Only handpicked Russian athletes will be able to participat­e in the competitio­ns, but under a neutral flag and without the national anthem being played. Wada estimated that Russia had “manipulate­d” the data of the Moscow anti-doping laboratory which were transmitte­d to it at the beginning of the year, an umpteenth rebound in a scandal which started with the revelation in 2015 of an institutio­nal doping practiced since 2011 and involving senior officials, secret agents and trafficked urine vials.

The significan­t extent of state-sponsored doping in Russia, notably between 2011 and 2015, was revealed in an independen­t report by sports lawyer Richard Mclaren, released in 2016.

The issue has dealt a colossal blow to the status of post-soviet Russia as a major sports power after hosting events such as the 2013 World Athletics Championsh­ips, the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and the 2018 World Cup.

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