WADA says IOC, IPC should consider ban on Russian athletes in Rio

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Rio 2016

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) on Monday recommended that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and International Paralympic Committee (IPC) should consider taking stringent measures against Russia.

It said both world sports bodies should start by banning all athletes entered by the Russian Olympic Committee for next month’s Rio Olympics.

WADA was responding to a damning independent report produced by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren and published on Monday.

It had revealed evidence of widespread state-sponsored doping by Russian athletes at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

WADA made seven recommendations after the report was published, including one that Russian government officials be denied access to international competitions, including Rio 2016.

Among the other recommendations, WADA said international federations from sports implicated in the report should consider action against Russian national bodies.

It also said McLaren and his team should complete their mandate, provided WADA can secure funding.

“Shamefully, the McLaren Report corroborates the allegations, exposing a modus operandi of serious manipulation of the doping control process in the satellite laboratory set up in Sochi for the 2014 Games.

“The same was obtainable at the Moscow laboratory since 2011 and after the Sochi Games,’’ WADA president Sir Craig Reedie in a statement.

“Not only does the evidence implicate the Russian Ministry of Sport in running a doping system whose sole aim was to subvert the doping control process, it also states that there was active participation and assistance of the Federal Security Service and the Centre of Sports Preparation of
National Teams of Russia.’’

The WADA-backed independent report confirmed allegations made by former Moscow Anti-Doping Laboratory head Grigory Rodchenkov.

He had two months ago said dozens of Russians used performance-enhancing drugs in Sochi with approval from national sports authorities.

The report said Russia’s Sports Ministry had overseen the manipulation of athletes’ analytical results for years before Sochi.

In Sochi itself, where international observers were scrutinising the drug tests, positive results could not simply be brushed away.

But a system of sample-swapping was put in place with the help of the FSB intelligence service, the report said.

McLaren described the deceptions as “beautiful in its simplicity’’.(Reuters/NAN)

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