Doping: Russia officials admit sports doping, say not
state-sponsored - New York Times
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[December 28, 2016]
(Reuters) - Russian officials
for the first time have admitted to mass doping in the country's
sports system but dismissed suggestions that the "institutional
conspiracy" was state-sponsored, the New York Times reported.
The final part of the World Anti-Doping Agency's independent report
into doping in Russia this month provided exhaustive evidence of an
elaborate doping scheme but officials at the time denied it was a
state-backed program.
The report found more than 1,000 Russian competitors in more than 30
sports were involved in a conspiracy to conceal positive drug tests
over a period of five years.
"It was an institutional conspiracy," Anna Antseliovich, the acting
director general of Russia's anti-doping agency, told the New York
Times, but added that top officials were not involved.
More than 100 Russian athletes were barred from competing at the
Olympics in Rio de Janeiro this year after the International Olympic
Committee set criteria for Russian athletes to meet, including a
clean doping past and sufficient testing at international events.
"From my point of view, as a former minister of sport, president of
the Olympic committee — we made a lot of mistakes," Vitaly Smirnov,
head of a new commission created to combat doping, was quoted as
saying by the New York Times.
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Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) Director General Anna
Antseliovich attends an interview in Moscow, Russia, May 24, 2016.
REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
"We have to find those reasons why young sportsmen are taking
doping, why they agree to be doped."
(Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; editing by Jason
Neely)
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