BFF-27 Putin says Russia complying with all World Anti-Doping Agency demands

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Putin says Russia complying with all World Anti-Doping Agency demands

MOSCOW, Oct 10, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – President Vladimir Putin said on
Thursday that Moscow was complying with all of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s
demands, as Russia faces another possible ban in the build-up to the Tokyo
Olympics.

Russia stands to be declared non-compliant by WADA if it fails to explain
why evidence of some positive tests handed over by a whistleblower does not
show up in data provided by Moscow’s anti-doping laboratory in January.

“We are actively cooperating with WADA. The requirements presented by this
organisation are being fully complied with,” Putin told a sports conference
in the city of Nizhny Novgorod.

“Our athletes are, above all, concerned with ensuring that any
shortcomings relating to anti-doping issues remain in the past and that
Russian athletes can compete on an equal footing,” he said.

Russia’s Athletics Federation has been banned from international
competition since 2015 over a vast state-run doping conspiracy, and the
International Association of Athletics Federations last month extended the
ban.

Last month, WADA gave Moscow a three-week deadline to respond to what it
said were “inconsistencies” in the data from 2011-2015, when state-sponsored
doping was prevalent.

On Tuesday the agency said it had received a response, which Russian
sports minister Pavel Kolobkov insisted addressed “all requirements”.

– ‘Tough punishment’ –

But Yuri Ganus, head of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency RUSADA, this week
lashed out at the country’s sports authorities, accusing them of manipulating
data before handing it over to WADA.

“Russian sports authorities…have shocked the whole world once again with
manipulations,” he wrote in an open letter published this week on the RUSADA
site.

“Sports authorities should think about measures to reduce the impact of
the impending new wave of the crisis…but in fact everything is being done
the other way round and is clearly extending the crisis for our sport.”

Ganus later told German magazine Der Spiegel that Russia could expect
“tough punishment”.

“The changes to the data are so big and significant that it can’t be an
accident,” he said.

An anti-doping source who wished to remain anonymous meanwhile told AFP
that the WADA teams “have scientific and technical evidence that data has
been erased from the databases transmitted” by Moscow.

Russia handed over thousands of files from its Moscow anti-doping
laboratory in January, fulfilling a key condition for its reinstatement by
WADA last September.

WADA has previously warned that it would take the “most stringent
sanctions” if any of the data was found to have been tampered with.

If Russia challenges an eventual suspension by WADA the case will go to
the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport, whose decision will be
binding on sports bodies including the International Olympic Committee.

RUSADA had been suspended for nearly three years over revelations of
wrongdoing including a systematic conspiracy to switch tainted samples at the
2014 Sochi Winter Olympics.

During its suspension by WADA, Russia was allowed by the International
Olympic Committee to take part in the 2016 Rio Olympics, but Russian
competitors at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Games had to take part under a
neutral flag.

BSS/AFP/BZC/2010HRS