Bay of Plenty Times

Anti-doping body confident Chinese swimmers weren’t cheating

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The World Anti-doping Agency said after reviewing various media reports that it stands by its decision to clear 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a banned heart medication before the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.

Wada addressed questions at a news conference yesterday and acknowledg­ed there would be scepticism about details of the case after the release on Monday of a documentar­y by German broadcaste­r ARD.

In an earlier statement following initial newspaper reports led by the New York Times, Wada said it agreed with Chinese authoritie­s and ruled the swimmers’ samples were contaminat­ed.

The contaminat­ion was accepted to have come from spice containers in the kitchen of a hotel where some of the Chinese team stayed for a national meet in January 2021

Chinese authoritie­s handling the case after testing the swimmers in January 2021 cleared them without any penalties and Wada accepted their conclusion­s. Sending independen­t investigat­ors to China that year was not feasible during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We had no credible way to disprove the contaminat­ion theory,” Wada prosecutor Ross Wenzel told reporters, adding there was no political pressure to drop the case.

Wenzel detailed a timeline from January to June 2021 for the case to be resolved.

That was just weeks before the Tokyo Olympics opened, and with the Beijing Winter Games approachin­g in February 2022 that were a personal project for Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Chinese swimmers went on to win three gold medals in Tokyo, where the United States took silver in two of those races and Britain was second in the other.

“Following Wada’s review of the documentar­y, the agency still stands firmly by the results of its scientific investigat­ion and legal decision concerning the case,” Wada said.

Wada said based on available scientific evidence and intelligen­ce, “which was gathered, assessed and tested by experts in the pharmacolo­gy of trimetazid­ine (TMZ); and, by anti-doping experts,” it had no basis under the global antidoping code to challenge the Chinese agency’s findings of

Chinese authoritie­s handling the case after testing the swimmers in January 2021 cleared them without any penalties and Wada accepted their conclusion­s.

environmen­tal contaminat­ion.

The drug at the centre of this case was also the medication that led to the suspension of Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva at the Winter Olympics in Beijing in 2022.

China’s star swimmer Sun Yang also tested positive for TMZ and served a three-month ban in 2014. That case also was kept quiet by Chinese and swim authoritie­s and provoked criticism from opponents when he won at the world championsh­ips the next year.

Dismissing weekend suggestion­s Wada was “soft on Chinese athletes,” agency president Witold Banka reminded reporters it had been “vigorously pursuing justice” in the Sun case.

A ban of more than four years for three-time Olympic champion Sun expires next month. —AP

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