Toronto Star

IOC lifts ban against Russia

Putin praises country’s athletes, says sports should be kept away from ‘problems unrelated’

- ROB HARRIS AND VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOCHI, RUSSIA— Russia’s ban from the Olympic movement was lifted on Wednesday despite two failed doping tests by its athletes at the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics.

President Vladimir Putin hailed the move during a Kremlin award ceremony for Olympic athletes, saying “we must turn this page.”

“We must draw relevant conclusion­s for ourselves, but I hope that internatio­nal organizati­ons also will eventually understand that sports must be kept away from problems unrelated to it,” he added.

The decision by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee appears to be an attempt to draw a line under the state-concocted doping scandal that tarnished the 2014 Olympics in Sochi.

The IOC allowed more than160 athletes it determined were clean to compete in Sochi as “Olympic Athletes from Russia” in Pyeongchan­g earlier this month with a prohibitio­n on the national anthem or flag in venues.

“You can take away any attributes, but you can’t take away our character, and you have proven it with your performanc­e,” Putin said after giving state awards to Olympic athletes in the Kremlin. “It has filled us all a sense of pride.”

He referred to members of the Russian ice hockey team performing the national anthem after receiving the Olympic gold, saying he would like to thank them for their patriotism.

Russia’s hopes of marching under its flag at Sunday’s closing ceremony in South Korea were stymied by the two positive tests for banned substances, including a curler who had to forfeit his bronze medal. But the IOC said Wednesday that all remaining test results were negative, clearing the path for Russia’s return to the Olympic fold.

“Therefore, as stated in the executive board decision of 25 February, the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee is automatica­lly lifted with immediate effect,” the IOC said in a statement.

Russian athletes won two gold medals in Pyeongchan­g, in figure skating and ice hockey, along with six silver medals and nine bronze.

“We put all our souls into that, we won those medals for our Motherland,” figure skater Yevgenia Medvedeva who won Olympic silver, said at the Kremlin award ceremony.

“We defended the country’s honour thanks to the Russian character,” echoed Pavel Datsyuk, the captain of the Russian ice hockey team.

“Thank you for your support and a chance to prove that the Russian character will never be broken.”

“I thank the fans who did not cross the line and what could result in sanctions,” Russian Olympic Committee President Alexander Zhukov said. “Today’s IOC’s decision is very important for us. The ROC is an absolutely full-fledged member of the Olympic family.”

Russia also complied with financial sanctions by paying $15 million for the IOC’s two investigat­ions into the scheme and toward future anti-doping work.

Vitaly Smirnov, the head of an antidoping commission set up by Russian President Vladimir Putin, acknowledg­ed “we have a long way to go to get rid of the mistakes, which we made in the past.”

But Russia continues to deny there was state involvemen­t in the plot, which included urine samples in supposedly tamper-proof bottles at the 2014 Olympics being swapped out for clean samples.

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