The Asian Age

Wada suspends India’s lab, ministry says will appeal

India’s National Dope Testing Laboratory, which got Wada accreditat­ion in 2008, is no longer authorised to carry out testing of the samples as the suspension is effective from Aug. 20 The developmen­t is a huge setback for India with less than a year left

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New Delhi, Aug. 23: The World Anti-Doping Agency has suspended the accreditat­ion of India’s National Dope Testing Laboratory for six months in a massive blow to the country’s antidoping programme, prompting a surprised sports ministry to brace up for an appeal.

The lab, which got Wada accreditat­ion in 2008, is no longer authorised to carry out testing of the samples as the suspension is effective from August 20. The developmen­t is a huge setback for India with less than a year left for the Tokyo Olympics.

The National Anti-Doping Agency can still collect samples (blood and urine) but will have to get them tested by a Wada-accredited laboratory outside India.

“This suspension has been imposed due to nonconform­ities with the Internatio­nal Standard for Laboratori­es (ISL) as identified during a Wada site visit,” Wada stated in a media release.

“The suspension prohibits the NDTL from carrying out any anti-doping activities, including all analyses of urine and blood samples,” it added.

Sports minister Kiren Rijiju said his ministry will appeal against the Wada decision before the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in Switzerlan­d.

“There were some issues in the past. After taking over as sports minister, I have taken cognizance of those issues and a course correction has been initiated. It is dishearten­ing that despite these efforts, WADA has taken this stance,” Rijuji said in a statement.

“We will appeal against this ban (at the CAS in Lausanne) and the process of appeal is already underway,” he added.

The Wada investigat­ion found that the sample analysis methods of the NDTL were not upto the mark. The NDTL can appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sports (CAS) in Lausanne in the next 21 days.

Sports secretary Radhey Shyam Julaniya said the move was surprising and could be a result of “business interests”.

“We have addressed all concerns raised by a Wada team during its last inspection in September 2018. So, the suspension came as a surprise to us,” Julaniya said.

“There is a huge business interest involved in this decision because the cost of testing in our laboratory is much cheaper than other countries,” he added.

The cost of testing is now expected to shoot up and it is feared that sample collection will come down drasticall­y because of this, casting a shadow on India’s anti-doping programme.

“NDTL is separate from Nada, we do not come into the picture when it comes to testing. We only collect samples,” Nada director general Navin Agarwal said when contacted.

The Indian Olympic Associatio­n said the nation is in no position to bear the additional expense of sending the samples to a different country, most likely the Wada-accredited laboratory in Bangkok, Thailand.

“It is a huge blow to the Olympic Movement in India with the Tokyo Games just 11 months away. India’s National Sports Federation­s (NSFs) are in no position to bear the extra cost,” IOA president Narinder Batra said.

The Wada stated that its Laboratory Expert Group (LabEG) initiated disciplina­ry proceeding­s, with regards to status of Wadaaccred­ited laboratori­es, May earlier this year.

The NDTL has been instructed to safely move all the samples lying with it to an accredited lab.

During the period of suspension, samples that have not yet been analysed by the NDTL; samples currently undergoing a confirmati­on procedure; and any samples for which an Adverse Analytical Finding (AAF) has been reported, must be securely transporte­d to another Wada-accredited laboratory.

The Wada has instructed NDTL to address all the non-conformiti­es that LabEG identified during their site visit.

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