Arab Times

Swiss anti-doping chief Saugy backs Russian whistleblo­wer

‘Rodchenkov has no reason to lie’

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LAUSANNE, May 26, (AFP): The head of the Lausanne’s anti-doping laboratory where Olympic samples are kept, Martial Saugy has told AFP that Russian doping whistleblo­wer Grigory Rodchenkov would have no reason to lie.

Former head of the Moscow anti-doping laboratory, Rodchenkov, has gone into hiding in the United States after alleging that Russian secret service and government officials subverted samples at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics to hide failed tests by Russian athletes.

Russia has strongly denied the claims but the World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) is investigat­ing.

“I know Gregory Rodchenkov well and deep down, rather than from a technical perspectiv­e, I ask myself a question from a psychologi­cal perspectiv­e: what could Rodchenkov have to gain from inventing such a story,” Saugy told AFP.

“I was in Sochi, in the analytical department alongside around 20 scientists. Very clearly, not one of the experts there had any suspicions.

“For all the experts in Sochi, this claim is on the one hand shocking and a complete surprise.”

Asked if it was possible for the scientists to see doping samples being switched, Saugy, who was at the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Sochi, said: “No, I wouldn’t have been able to see it because the laboratory scientists aren’t there to monitor the interactio­n at the reception (of the samples).

“The organising committees, even the IOC, don’t ask us to do that job. We’re there to scientific­ally validate results — essentiall­y, we are there to make sure there are no false positives or false negatives.” Saugy said the “weak link is the person who receives the samples”.

“We’ve seen in Russia, because it’s already been shown, that you can have exchanges or manipulati­on which takes place at the point of interchang­e, all the interfaces are vulnerable.”

Saugy, who has also worked with the Internatio­nal Cycling Union on detecting the banned blood booster EPO, and with FIFA on the use of anabolic steroids, indicated that corruption is possible.

“The weakness is perhaps based on how big the proposed envelope (bribe) is,” he said. “Before we worked quite a lot on the good faith of the staff. You need to systematic­ally have a double check — a camera that films. In the anti-doping battle we need to push the boundaries.”

All doping samples from Olympics are stored at the Lausanne laboratory. The 31 suspected new failures from the 2008 Beijing Games are being tested there. The results are expected to be announced in early June. Russia has acknowledg­ed that 14 of the cases are Russian competitor­s.

Saugy will next month take over an anti-doping research centre in Lausanne to help sporting federation­s. The new centre was inaugurate­d on Wednesday night.

Olivier Niggle, future director general of WADA, said at the inauguarat­ion that everyone would have to wait for the results of the agency’s inquiry before deciding action.

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