No
Russian athletes at the 2016 world indoor championships: source
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[November 20, 2015]
By Gene Cherry
(Reuters) - There will no be Russian
athletes at the 2016 IAAF world indoor championships in Portland, Oregon
next March, a source with knowledge of the decision told Reuters on
Thursday.
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The championships will be the first global athletics meeting the
Russians will miss since the International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF) suspended Moscow last week amid allegations of
widespread and state-sponsored doping, detailed in a World
Anti-Doping Agency independent commission report.
That suspension will not be lifted before an IAAF inspection team
has completed their investigation and verified that the Russian
athletics federation meets the objectives of IAAF membership, the
source told Reuters.
The indoor championships are scheduled for March 17-20, 10 days
before the inspection team is scheduled to make its first report to
an IAAF Council meeting in Wales on March 27.
The source emphasised Russian athletes could not compete in any
international events, including cross country and track and field,
until the suspension is lifted.
Russia is a major player in world athletics, having finished second
to the United States in the last indoor championships in Poland in
2014 and in the athletics competition at the 2012 Olympics in
London.
IAAF chief Sebastian Coe said on Thursday that Russia needs to prove
its commitment to anti-doping according to "robust" verification
criteria if its track and field athletes are to return to
competitions.
"For the protection of all clean athletes, there cannot be any
timeframe for (Russia's) return until we are assured all criteria
have been fully met and will continue to be met forever," Coe said.
Coe said a set of five principles would help define the verification
criteria of the IAAF inspection team, which will start work no later
than Jan. 1, 2016.
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The Briton said Russia needed to take immediate corrective and
disciplinary measures against athletes involved in doping while also
establishing an effective and operational anti-doping framework.
Russia also needed to establish a robust anti-doping programme,
ensure anti-doping code compliance and undergo reforms to help deter
athletes from doping, such as criminalizing the distribution of
banned substances.
Several countries, including Germany, Spain and Italy have
introduced laws criminalising doping among elite athletes.
Organisers of the world indoor championships, being held in the
United States for only the second time, declined to comment on the
absence of the Russian team until an official announcement was made
by the IAAF.
Russian officials were not immediately available for comment.
(Reporting by Gene Cherry and Toby Davis; Editing by Andrew Roche)
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