Russian
athletes must be banned from Rio Olympics: INADO
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[November 17, 2015]
By Karolos Grohmann
BERLIN (Reuters) - Russia's track and
field athletes should be banned from competing at the 2016 Rio de
Janeiro Olympics in order to send a strong signal against doping, the
Institute of National Doping Organisations (INADO) said on Tuesday.
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"The ARAF – Russia’s national federation for athletics – and its
athletes must be suspended from the 2016 Rio de Janeiro summer
Olympic Games. The corruption in Russian athletics deserves no
less," INADO, the Germany-based umbrella organization with 53
members worldwide, said in a statement.
"ARAF has not demonstrated that they are capable of sending a clean
team to Games. A strong deterrent message must be sent that national
federations cannot participate in the highest levels of competition
when anti-doping has been intentionally subverted."
The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF)
suspended ARAF last week following allegations of widespread and
state-sponsored doping as detailed in a World Anti-Doping Agency
independent commission report.
Russia has since announced a three-month road map to clean up its
act, with the nation's Olympic Committee leading efforts to ensure
honest athletes can compete at the 2016 Games.
Russia said on Sunday it would ask the world athletics body to allow
its athletes to compete under an Olympic banner rather than the
Russian flag to circumvent a ban, but the idea was quickly brushed
aside by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
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"The actions by the ARAF, which deliberately flouted the rules of
sport, have tainted all Russian athletes in the sport of Athletics,"
INADO said.
"The corruption of anti-doping uncovered by the independent
commission is a tragedy for sport and for clean athletes everywhere.
It reinforces the need for anti-doping work to be conducted
independent of sport organizations and without government
interference.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; editing by Justin Palmer)
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