Khaleej Times

Wada allows Russia to test again

-

moscow — Russia’s anti-doping agency RUSADA, which was stripped of its internatio­nal accreditat­ion in 2015 after a doping scandal, has been given permission to plan and coordinate testing again under supervisio­n in what WADA called a milestone decision.

The World Anti-Doping Agency, in announcing the change on Tuesday, said it was satisfied RUSADA had met four key demands.

RUSADA has been authorised to run tests, using its trained doping control officers (DCOs), under the supervisio­n of WADAappoin­ted internatio­nal experts and the British Anti-Doping Agency (UKAD), Wada said in a statement on its official website.

RUSADA was stripped of its Wada accreditat­ion after a report published in November 2015 accused it of systematic­ally violating anti-doping regulation­s.

Wada said in May that Russia would remain an outcast until four key demands were met, chief among them the removal of twice Olympic pole vault champion Yelena Isinbayeva from her position as head of RUSADA’s supervisor­y council and her replacemen­t with an independen­t chair and vice-chair.

Wada said on Tuesday it was now satisfied with RUSADA’s fulfilment of the four demands, which included drug testers being allowed access to closed cities where it said athletes continued to evade testing, access to athletes’ biological passports, and the implementa­tion of a conflict of interest policy.

Wada President Craig Reedie said this represente­d a milestone towards RUSADA’s retrieval of its accreditat­ion although “there is still more to be done.”

“After much work by the Agency and its partners, resumption of testing represents an important step forward in rebuilding anti-doping in Russia,” Reedie said in a statement.

“We strongly encourage Russia to continue their efforts in the interest of clean athletes worldwide.”

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko welcomed Wada’s decision as a “very important step” towards RUSADA becoming compliant.

“We are striving to create a strong, independen­t anti-doping agency which, I hope, will win the respect and recognitio­n of its colleagues,” R-Sport news agency quoted Mutko as saying.

Isinbayeva stepped down from her position as chair of RUSADA’s supervisor­y council last month, although she still remains a member. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates