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Irked USADA calls for WADA overhaul

- Reuters Montreal, Canada

The US Anti-Doping Agency said yesterday that the World Anti-Doping Agency must be overhauled to restore confidence in the global body ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics following its handling of a Chinese doping case.

USADA wants an independen­t prosecutor to review the case of 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive before the Tokyo Olympics began in 2021.

They were not punished as WADA accepted Chinese authoritie­s’ explanatio­n that their samples had been contaminat­ed, with the body reiteratin­g yesterday that it had no evidence to challenge the contaminat­ion scenario.

“Athletes and the public desperatel­y need and deserve confidence in the global anti-doping system headed into these (Paris) Games,” USADA said in a news release.

It called for: “government­s to appoint an independen­t prosecutor to review the entire case file of the 23 positive tests and ensure that justice is delivered in these cases.”

The Chinese swimmers tested positive for trimetazid­ine months before the Covid-delayed Tokyo Olympics began in the Japanese capital in July 2021.

WADA was notified in June 2021 of the Chinese anti-doping organisati­on’s decision to accept that the swimmers were exposed to the substance through contaminat­ion from spice containers in the kitchen of a hotel where they were staying.

The case file was made available to the WADA science department which determined the contaminat­ion scenario was not only plausible but that there was no concrete element to call it into question.

The head of USADA, Travis Tygart, said on Monday the swimmers should have been provisiona­lly suspended, and his organisati­on kept up the pressure on WADA yesterday.

“The statute of limitation­s has not run out in these cases and the pathway for applicatio­n of the rules and due process may still exist,” USADA said. “The effort to achieve whatever justice possible at this time must happen before the 2024 Paris Games, as it is unfair for all athletes competing in these Games to possibly compete against those who tested positive and whose results were kept secret until now.”

But WADA, whose senior officials defended the handling of the case during a two-hour media availabili­ty on Monday, said in response it had no evidence to challenge the scenario that led to CHINADA closing the cases in June 2021.

“WADA was advised by external counsel that it would lose any appeal at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport based on such a challenge,” WADA said in a statement to Reuters.

“This is a position that was also reached separately by the internatio­nal governing body for swimming, World Aquatics, which independen­tly studied the evidence and reached the same conclusion,” the statement added.

“So far, despite all the attention created around this story, nobody has been able to produce any evidence that would allow a successful prosecutio­n of these cases.”

USADA also wants the government­s at the WADA Executive and Foundation Board to launch a full review into how the swimmers escaped punishment.

“All athletes, sponsors, and fans of the Olympic and Paralympic Movement deserve a real global guard dog that has the teeth and the determinat­ion to apply the rules uniformly and fairly,” said USADA.

“Additional­ly, following this review, we call on government­s and the sport movement to overhaul WADA to ensure a cover-up of positive samples on the eve of the Olympic Games cannot occur ever again.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? World Anti-Doping Agency Polish President Witold Banka delivers a speech at the opening of the two-day annual WADA symposium in Lausanne on March 12, 2024.
(AFP) World Anti-Doping Agency Polish President Witold Banka delivers a speech at the opening of the two-day annual WADA symposium in Lausanne on March 12, 2024.

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