The Mercury

Russians hack Wada, publish US athletes’ data

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CONFIDENTI­AL athlete medical data relating to last month’s Rio Olympics had been hacked and published by a Russian cyber espionage group with the threat of more to come, the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) said yesterday.

It identified the group as Tsar Team (APT28), also known as Fancy Bear.

The www.fancybear.net website said it had informatio­n about a number of US athletes, including tennis sisters Serena and Venus Williams, as well as multiple gold medal-winning gymnast Simone Biles.

“Wada condemns these ongoing cyber-attacks that are being carried out in an attempt to undermine Wada and the global anti-doping system,” said director general Olivier Niggli.

“Wada has been informed by law enforcemen­t authoritie­s that these attacks are originatin­g out of Russia.”

Russian news agencies quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying any possible Russian government or secret service participat­ion in the hacking was “out of question”.

Russia’s track and field team, with the exception of one athlete based in the US, were banned from the Rio Games in August over what Wada said was a state-backed doping programme.

Russian competitor­s in other sports also had to prove they were clean by meeting several criteria to be eligible to compete in Brazil.

The fancybear.net website said the group had hacked the Wada databases and would start by releasing exclusive informatio­n on the US team, followed later by other national Olympic teams.

Wada said the group was believed to have gained access to its anti-doping administra­tion and management system (Adams) via an Internatio­nal Olympic Committee-created account for the Rio Games.

Data accessed included socalled Therapeuti­c Use Exemptions (TUE) issued by sports federation­s and national anti-doping organisati­ons that allow athletes to take certain substances.

“Wada deeply regrets this situation and is very conscious of the threat that it represents to athletes whose confidenti­al informatio­n has been divulged through this criminal act,” said Niggli.

“We are reaching out to stakeholde­rs ... regarding the specific athletes impacted.”

Niggli added that the hack was “greatly compromisi­ng the effort by the global anti-doping community to re-establish trust in Russia”.

The McLaren report described, among other things, how Russians replaced positive doping samples with clean ones during the Sochi winter Games with the support of the Russian secret service.

Wada revealed last month that Russian whistleblo­wer Yulia Stepanova’s electronic account had been illegally accessed, with a “perpetrato­r” obtaining details that would normally include her registered whereabout­s.

Stepanova, in hiding in North America, helped reveal the biggest state-backed doping programme in Russia and was forced to flee the country with her husband in fear of her life. – Reuters

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