Bulgaria
weightlifters get Rio ban over widespread doping
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[November 20, 2015]
By Karolos Grohmann
BERLIN (Reuters) - Bulgaria's
weightlifters will be absent from next year's Olympics after the sport's
governing body banned the country's athletes following a high number of
doping cases, it said on Friday.
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"Due to the special anti-doping policy for Rio 2016, the EB
(Executive Board) confirmed that Bulgaria is not eligible to
participate in the upcoming Olympic Games," the International
Weightlifting Federation (IWF) said.
In March, eight male lifters, including three European champions,
and three female athletes, tested positive for the banned anabolic
steroid stanozolol at a training camp for the European championships
in Tbilisi, Georgia.
Former European champion Demir Demirev, 2014 European champions Ivan
Markov and Ivaylo Filev and female weightlifter Milka Maneva have
also been banned for similar offences.
Bulgarian weightlifting has suffered repeated embarrassment due to
doping cases and the national body was temporarily stripped of its
license in 2009.
A year earlier, Bulgarian weightlifters first missed the biggest
event on their sporting calendar after the Balkan nation withdrew
its team prior to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing when 11 members
failed doping tests.
Bulgaria's reputation was also tarnished at the 2000 Olympics in
Sydney, where the team were stripped of three gold medals and sent
home in shame following positive drugs tests.
The IWF also decided to withdraw one of Romania's quota of lifters
for the Games due to multiple positive tests for the country's
athletes during the qualification period, it said.
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The bans come amid a high-profile doping scandal involving Russian
track and field athletes with the country's federation suspended
along with its anti-doping agency and drugs-testing lab.
The sanctions are part of a crackdown on drugs cheats in Russia
following a report by a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) special
commission which exposed widespread state-sponsored doping.
The report detailed cover-ups, bribes to conceal positive tests,
destruction of samples and evidence of state security services
colluding with the athletics federation to facilitate cheating.
(Editing by John O'Brien)
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