Arab Times

Pound calls for tough stance on Russian doping

Anti-doping system to be ready in early 2017: Putin

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LOS ANGELES, Dec 1, (AFP): Former World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) chief Dick Pound has called for a tough stance on Russia’s doping violations as the sports world braces for the release of a new investigat­ion into accusation­s of state-run cheating.

Pound, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s representa­tive on the WADA Foundation Board, said firm action against Russia was necessary to deter other nations from widespread doping.

“I think if we are sufficient­ly firm with Russia, there will be an enormous deterrent effect,” Pound told AFP in a wide-ranging interview ahead of the December 9 release of a report by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren expected to shine more light on doping in Russia.

The first part of the McLaren report, commission­ed by WADA after revelation­s by the former head of the Moscow anti-doping laboratory, was published in July and detailed an elaborate statespons­ored scheme in Russia to manipulate drug tests at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s.

Publicatio­n of the report plunged the Olympic movement into chaos on the eve of the Rio de Janeiro Games, with the IOC and WADA at loggerhead­s over how best to sanction the Russian Olympic Committee.

Pound believes the IOC’s failure to impose a blanket ban on Russia from Rio represente­d a missed opportunit­y, and undermined the organizati­on’s repeated pledges of a “zero tolerance” policy on doping.

“You can’t have a mantra like the IOC does of ‘zero tolerance for doping’ which means ‘zero tolerance for doping - unless it’s Russia, because Russia is a big and important country,’” Pound told AFP.

“There was an opportunit­y to send the message by saying ‘no matter who you are, how important is your country, if you cheat, there will be consequenc­es’.

“The IOC is nothing if it has no ethical principles, it is always hoped to be the ethical leader of sport, here was a chance to demonstrat­e that.”

The IOC ultimately left it up to internatio­nal sports federation­s to determine whether or not they would allow Russian athletes to take part in Rio, a decision which drew stinging criticism from anti-doping officials.

Pound said the IOC’s response to the McLaren report had been influenced by Russia’s status as a sporting superpower.

“You and I both know that if the country involved had been Guatemala, the answer would have been quite different,” he said. “It’s the fact this is Russia that seems to create a problem for the IOC.”

Pound said he had not seen the contents of the second McLaren report but expected it would paint a “very, very damaging” picture of Russian sport that would require a severe response from the IOC.

“To be switching samples in the middle of the Olympics in your country, it’s a huge attack on the Olympics,” Pound said.

Meanwhile, President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that Russia’s new anti-doping programme will be ready in early 2017 as the country battles to clean up its scandal-tainted image.

“Every cloud has a silver lining. I am convinced the so-called doping scandal will help us to create the most advanced system to fight this evil,” Putin said in his annual state of the nation address.

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