Russia escapes IOC blanket ban for Rio
Olympics
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[July 25, 2016]
By Karolos Grohmann
(Reuters) - The International Olympic
Committee (IOC) has rejected clarion calls for Russia to be banned from
next month's Rio Olympics over the nation's doping record, offering
athletes a lifeline by ruling that decisions on individual competitors
will be left to the international sports federations.
The IOC's decision on Sunday, less than two weeks before the Rio Games
opens on Aug. 5, follows the World Anti-Doping Agency's (WADA) call for
a blanket ban in response to the independent McLaren report that found
evidence of state-sponsored doping by Russian athletes at the 2014
Winter Olympics in Sochi.
"I think in this way, we have balanced on the one hand, the desire and
need for collective responsibility versus the right to individual
justice of every individual athlete," IOC President Thomas Bach said on
a conference call.
"In this way we are protecting the clean athletes because of the high
criteria we set. This may not please everybody, but this result is one
which is respecting the rules of justice and all the clean athletes all
over the world."
WADA and 14 national anti-doping organisations had urged the IOC to
impose a blanket ban in the wake of the damning McLaren report, but
former Olympic fencing champion Bach said that Russian sportsmen and
women "will have to clear the highest hurdle to take part in the
Olympics".
'CONFUSING MESS'
The United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) said the IOC had failed to
show leadership with its decision.
"Many, including clean athletes and whistleblowers, have demonstrated
courage and strength in confronting a culture of state-supported doping
and corruption within Russia," USADA chief Travis Tygart said.
"Disappointingly, however, in response to the most important moment for
clean athletes and the integrity of the Olympic Games, the IOC has
refused to take decisive leadership. The decision regarding Russian
participation and the confusing mess left in its wake is a significant
blow to the rights of clean athletes."
Russia's Sports Minister, Vitaly Mutko, said the decision cleared the
way for Russian participation.
"I hope that the majority of international federations will very
promptly confirm the right of (Russian) sportspeople in different types
of sports to take part in the Olympic Games," Mutko said.
The International Tennis Federation wasted no time in clearing the seven
Russian players nominated for Rio. The ITF said the players have been
subject to a rigorous anti-doping programme outside Russia, which it
considers sufficient to meet the IOC's requirements.
SPOTLESS RECORD REQUIRED
For individuals to be allowed to compete at Rio they must have a
spotless international record on drug testing, the IOC said, adding
athletes who have been sanctioned in the past for doping will not be
eligible.
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Acrobats perform on the Olympics rings at Paulista Avenue in Sao
Paulo's financial center, Brazil, July 24, 2016. REUTERS/Paulo
Whitaker
That would dash the hopes of middle-distance runner Yulia Stepanova,
the whistleblower and former drug cheat whose initial evidence led
to one of the biggest doping scandals in decades.
The IOC had said this week that it would not organise or give
patronage to any sports event in Russia and that no member of the
Russian Sports Ministry implicated in the McLaren report would be
accredited for Rio.
It also ordered the immediate re-testing of all Russian athletes
from the Sochi Olympics.
Though a series of international federations, anti-doping agencies
and athletes have since called for a blanket ban, some have said
they are against punishing innocent athletes.
"It would be quite difficult for us to think we should ban an entire
team, which will include some cyclists who are not implicated in any
of these stories we've been hearing," said Brian Cookson, president
of the International Cycling Union.
"We're going to have to look at it case by case, rider by rider and
team by team. At the end of the day, Russians are not the only
sportsmen or women who have been found doping."
Russian officials and government officers have said the doping
allegations are part of a Western conspiracy against their country.
Russian President Vladimir Putin had warned that the affair could
split the Olympic movement, bringing echoes of the 1980s. The United
States led a political boycott of the 1980 Moscow Games and the
Soviet Union led an Eastern Bloc boycott of the Los Angeles Games
four years later.
(Additional reporting by Steve Tongue, Gene Cherry and Jack Stubbs;
Editing by David Goodman)
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