The Malta Independent on Sunday

Russia prevents WADA from finding doping data in Moscow lab

Doping

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World Anti-Doping Agency inspectors are leaving Moscow emptyhande­d after Russian authoritie­s prevented them from accessing key doping data that the country's authoritie­s had agreed to hand over.

WADA reinstated the suspended Russian Anti-Doping Agency in September on the condition Russian authoritie­s hand over lab data, which could help confirm a number of violations uncovered during an investigat­ion that revealed a state-sponsored doping program designed to win medals at the Sochi Olympics and other major events.

But Friday, WADA said its delegation "was unable to complete its mission" because Russia unexpected­ly demanded its equipment be "certified under Russian law." WADA says the demand wasn't raised at earlier talks. The deadline to turn over the data is December 31.

WADA says team leader Toni Pascual will now prepare a report on the failed mission. The WADA compliance review committee that recommende­d RUSADA's reinstatem­ent will meet January 14-15, where it could recommend the ban on RUSADA be re-imposed. WADA kept open the option of returning to the lab before year's end if Russia resolves the issue.

Russian Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov told local media the WADA team would return, but there was no word on the date and no mention of the issue raised by WADA.

WADA leaders portrayed Russia's willingnes­s to turn over the data as a key reason for agreeing to reinstate RUSADA despite its failure to comply with key requiremen­ts on the "roadmap" WADA had set out.

"We've tried to come to terms with the Russians on how this was to be done, and this is the first time since discussing it that they've actually said 'yes,'" WADA director general Olivier Niggli in September, in an impassione­d defense of the decision. "We hope they'll fulfill that promise."

It was a widely criticized decision, and the reaction to Friday's news was predictabl­e.

"Surprise, surprise — anyone shocked by this?" said Travis Tygart, the CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. "Let's hope WADA leadership has finally learned the lesson and immediatel­y declares them non-compliant. Anything else is simply another shiv in the back of clean athletes."

 ??  ?? The building of Russia's national drug-testing laboratory
The building of Russia's national drug-testing laboratory

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