New Straits Times

Paralympic­s lift Russia doping suspension

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Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee said on Friday it will reinstate Russia next month, lifting a suspension imposed more than two years ago over a doping scandal.

The IPC will lift the ban by March 15, providing the Russian Paralympic Committee (RPC) adhere to strict conditions.

“In August 2016 the IPC suspended the RPC because it was necessary and proportion­ate to the situation we faced and essential to ensure clean sport,” IPC president Andrew Parsons said.

“Twenty-nine months later it is the IPC governing board’s firm belief that keeping the RPC suspended is no longer necessary and proportion­ate to the situation we now face in Russia.”

A year ago, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ended its ban on Russian athletes competing at future summer and winter Olympics, so the re-admittance of the Paralympic team is the latest step in Russia’s gradual rehabilita­tion in the Olympic movement.

The IPC said in a statement the Russian Paralympic Committee had met the necessary criteria for reinstatem­ent — which must be maintained — after implementi­ng a “robust” testing programme under the guidance of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and launched an antidoping education programme for athletes and coaches.

Stanislav Pozdniakov, chairman of the RPC, hailed the news as a “very important step” but noted that “there is still much work to be done to implement the instructio­ns of the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee.”

A Kremlin spokesman said Russia was “absolutely thrilled for our Paralympic athletes.”

“(President Vladimir) Putin has always shown them full and unconditio­nal support,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“We hope the constructi­ve and transparen­t work will allow the Russian sports authoritie­s to turn the page in their relations with internatio­nal bodies.”

Russia’s Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov said the RPC “worked for two and a half years for its rehabilita­tion, and we did a tremendous job.”

Russia was kicked out of the 2016 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, as well as both editions in 2018, in the wake of the bombshell 2016 McLaren report, by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren, which alleged the country was operating a state-backed doping programme.

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