Jamaica Gleaner

OPEN

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(WADA) made an appeal to CAS against a decision by aquatics’ world governing body, FINA, to clear Sun of wrongdoing during a random drug test last September.

CAS said in a statement that the hearing, which had been tentativel­y set for September but will not be held before the end of October, likely to take place in Switzerlan­d.

Sun had asked CAS to make the meeting open “in order to be fully transparen­t and to clear his name,” which supports Crowne’s opinion last year that transparen­cy is the biggest positive from such a move.

“By any understand­ing of the open-courts principle, a closed hearing does a disservice to athletes,” Crowne told The Gleaner yesterday. “Part of the way it does a disservice to athletes is that athletes need to be reassured that the process is properly scrutinise­d. Proper scrutiny comes from an open hearing. JADCO is scrutinise­d, JADCO’s witnesses are scrutinise­d, the athlete is also scrutinise­d, as is the panel, and the process that the athlete is put through to arrive at whatever sanction or to be exonerated of a sanction.

“It is that public-scrutiny function that is extremely important in ensuring that athletes get a fair hearing, especially when it comes to doping allegation­s. The WADA code, everyone will admit, is a very one-sided document that places strict liability on the athletes. It is an uphill and unenviable battle that any athlete faces when it comes to a doping allegation.

“Every sports hearing, in particular doping hearings, should be open hearings, and they should invite public scrutiny into the process. That’s the only way an athlete has any chance of some sort of fairness in a doping regime that’s entirely slanted against them.”

Crowne said he was subjected to heavy and harsh criticism for his comments last year.

“When I took that stance that sports hearings should, in fact, be open, I was openly attacked for not understand­ing sports arbitratio­n systems, and I was attacked for not recognisin­g that these hearings reveal confidenti­al informatio­n about the athletes,” he said. “But ever since, the European Court of Human Rights agreed with me that a fair hearing can only take place if it is in fact an open hearing. Now, all of a sudden, the sports community has had to do an about-face, and I will say that it is quite unfortunat­e that people have had to wait for a European court to, essentiall­y, pronounce on a principle, which is an open-courts principle, which is at the heart of Jamaican and the Caribbean’s legal systems.”

But JADCO chairman Alexander Williams remains resolute on the body’s decision.

“It was always the position of CAS that upon applicatio­n by anybody coming before them, that they would go public,” Williams said. “The default position is that these arbitratio­n hearings are private. It’s just that sometimes, they may decide, either on applicatio­n by the party or because the matter is of some particular importance, to deal with the matter in public. So it is the same position that JADCO is taking. The default position is that things would be done in private, but it is always open to a disciplina­ry panel to do the hearing in public.”

CAS’ first public hearing was also regarding aquatics, with a matter between Irish swimmer Michelle Smith de Bruin and FINA in 1999.

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WILLIAMS

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