BSP-15 ‘Be guardians of clean sport’: Athletes demand WADA Russia rethink

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‘Be guardians of clean sport’: Athletes demand WADA Russia rethink

PARIS, Sept 20, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – High-profile stars such as Paula
Radcliffe and Valerie Adams led athletes’ demands on Wednesday for WADA to
rethink plans to lift its suspension of Russia, claiming the anti-doping body
“owe it to all clean athletes to be the guardians of clean sport”.

WADA stunned the sports world last week after announcing that the body’s
compliance review committee had recommended lifting its three-year suspension
of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA).

The decision is set to be announced at a WADA meeting in the Seychelles
on Thursday.

However, women’s marathon world record holder Radcliffe and Olympic and
world shot put champion Adams have put their names to an IAAF Athletes’
Commission letter urging WADA to step back from the brink.

“The sporting community around the world has spoken and the message is
consistent and clear: RUSADA cannot be declared compliant until all
outstanding conditions set out in the Roadmap have been satisfied,” they
wrote.

“We believe that any compromises to the Roadmap will tarnish WADA’s
reputation and bring global sport into disrepute.”

WADA suspended the RUSADA in 2015 after declaring it to be non-compliant
following revelations of a vast, Moscow-backed scheme to avoid drug testers.

A WADA report by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren accused Russian
authorities of running an elaborate doping programme with the full support of
the Russian Ministry of Sport and the Russian secret service or FSB.

Russian officials had previously concluded that their doping system
failed, but refused to acknowledge claims of institutional involvement.

Tensions within WADA emerged earlier this year over whether Russia had
done enough for the sanction to be lifted, with some officials arguing it had
not completed a “roadmap” to rehabilitation.

However WADA’s statement last Friday said its compliance committee had
recommended reinstating RUSADA after reviewing a letter from the Russian
Ministry of Sport.

“We recognise that Russian sport has taken significant steps forward on
the road to compliance,” added the IAAF Athletes Commission in Wednesday’s
letter, signed by 14 individuals.

— ‘Owe it to all clean athletes’ –

“However, given the severity of Russia’s egregious violations to the
integrity of sport, the conditions in the roadmap are appropriate,
proportionate and more importantly, grounded on principles of transparency
and integrity.

“The roadmap was created and approved by you. Our request is simple:
follow the rules that you’ve created the same way we are expected to. You owe
it to all clean athletes to be the guardians of clean sport.”

WADA’s plan, which will pave the way for Russian athletes to be
readmitted into international sport, has already been widely condemned.

United States Anti-Doping chief executive Travis Tygart told AFP that
WADA was entering the “last chance saloon”.

“They have an opportunity to right the ship, but athletes are
frustrated,” said Tygart.

“In the words of athletes out there, they want Russia back at any cost.
And even at the cost of the credibility of the system and the weakening of
WADA in the eyes of the world. “That’s a horrible position to be in if you’re
an athlete. Because it’s tough enough to live by the anti-doping rules. You
want to compete clean and you’re willing to do it. But that’s as long as you
believe those that are enforcing the rules against others have your back.

“The moment you think they’re willing to turn a blind eye — whether
it’s a large country like Russia, or individual athletes — that then puts a
lot of pressure on you to similarly throw in the towel, and cheat.”

BSS/AFP/BZC/1225HRS