The prospect of Russia being banned from next year’s Olympics loomed closer on Friday as a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) panel recommended that the country’s drug-testing authority be declared non-compliant with international rules.
In a statement, WADA said its Compliance Review Committee had recommended that the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) be suspended again when the global anti-doping watchdog’s executive committee meets in Paris on Dec. 9.
If WADA chiefs adopt the recommendation, Russia faces severe sanctions, including a possible ban from next year’s Tokyo Olympics.
Photo: AP
The review panel issued its recommendation after asking Russia to explain “inconsistencies” in laboratory data handed over by Moscow to WADA investigators in January.
Full disclosure of data from the Moscow laboratory was a key condition of Russia’s controversial reinstatement by WADA in September last year.
RUSADA had been suspended for nearly three years over revelations of a vast, state-backed doping regime that including a systematic conspiracy to switch tainted samples at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics.
WADA had previously warned Russia that it would face the “most stringent sanctions” if any of the data handed over were found to have been tampered with.
In its statement on Friday, WADA said that the review panel suggested “serious consequences in line with the International Standard for Code Compliance by Signatories.”
The US Anti-Doping Agency, which was sharply critical of WADA’s decision to lift its suspension of reinstate RUSADA, called for a lengthy ban following Friday’s announcement.
“Anything less than a four-year sanction for this critical violation that includes aggravating circumstances following years of denial and deceit would be another injustice in a long line of many for clean athletes,” USADA chief executive Travis Tygart said in e-mailed comments.
Friday’s development is the latest twist to a saga which exploded in 2015, when an independent WADA commission investigating allegations of Russian doping said it had found evidence of a vast state-supported conspiracy stretching back years.
A 2016 report by WADA investigator Richard McLaren said more than 1,000 Russian competitors across multiple sports had benefited from the scheme between 2011 and 2015.
In an interview last month, RUSADA head Yuri Ganus appeared resigned to Russia being handed an Olympic ban, accusing unidentified Moscow authorities of handing over falsified lab data to WADA.
“Russia’s Olympic squad will be prevented from participating fully in the Olympic Games in Tokyo... I think that this will also happen at the [Winter Olympic] Games in China,” Ganus said.
Russia was already banned from last year’s Winter Olympics, although 168 athletes were allowed to compete under a neutral “Olympic Athlete From Russia” designation.
Ganus said he expected a range of other penalties too, including restrictions on holding international tournaments in Russia, exclusion of Russians from international sports federations and fines.
Ganus insisted that RUSADA officials had not been responsible for falsifying the data, insisting his staff “had nothing to do with the database and its transfer.”
Russian Minister of Sports Pavel Kolobkov later denied that the data had been tampered with, saying: “Nothing was removed” before the cache of information was handed over.
“There was not any manipulation as the head of Russia’s anti-doping laboratory, Yuri Ganus, says. That’s our position,” Kolobkov said.
Friday’s announcement by WADA came as World Athletics, the governing body for track and field, abruptly halted Russia’s reinstatement process into the sport.
The World Athletics decision was taken after Russian Athletics Federation president Dmitry Shlyakhtin and other senior officials were suspended for “serious breaches” of anti-doping rules.
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