Russia cries foul, rest of world welcomes
IAAF's ban
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[June 18, 2016]
By Mitch Phillips
(Reuters) - Russia claimed the IAAF’s
decision to continue its ban of Russian athletics on Friday was unfair
and threatened legal action, while the rest of the world welcomed the
move and urged the IOC not to go against it.
"We are extremely disappointed by the IAAF’s decision, creating
the unprecedented situation of a whole nation’s track and field
athletes being banned from the Olympics," said the Russian ministry
of sport.
"Clean athletes' dreams are being destroyed because of the
reprehensible behavior of other athletes and officials.
"We now appeal to the members of the International Olympic Committee
to not only consider the impact that our athletes’ exclusion will
have on their dreams and the people of Russia, but also that the
Olympics themselves will be diminished by their absence."
The IAAF voted unanimously to uphold its ban on Russia for
systematic doping, saying the country had not made enough progress
on reforms to dispel concerns of state-sponsored drug abuse.
The Russian athletics federation blamed the media, saying: “The
pressure which we experienced in the last few days ahead of the
council meeting, when every day we had some kind of interview or
publications, which as a rule had negative connotations, doubtlessly
influenced the decision.”
Yelena Isinbayeva, who had hoped to seek a third Olympic pole vault
gold in Rio and who is one of Russia’s most prominent athletes,
described it as a violation of human rights.
“I will not be quiet, I will take steps. I will go to the human
rights court. I will prove to the IAAF and WADA that they made the
wrong decision,” she said, referring to the World Anti-Doping
Agency.
A Kremlin spokesman, speaking hours before the ban was extended,
said: “Everything possible needed to defend the rights of our
athletes and the Olympic team is being done and will be done at a
legal level."
The IOC merely “took note” of the decision but said it would discuss
the situation in a telephone conference on Saturday.
The United States Olympic Committee described it as a step in the
right direction.
“It gives a measure of hope to clean athletes that there are
consequences not only for athletes who dope, but for countries which
do not engage seriously in the fight against doping,” it said.
Stephanie Hightower, president of US Track and Field and an IAAF
Council member, said it was “the only proper course of action given
the compelling and powerful evidence presented to Council.
“We do not believe that every Russian athlete cheated, and it is
unfortunate and regrettable that some may pay a penalty for the
serious transgressions of their federation."
There was some sympathy elsewhere too for innocent Russian athletes,
with American Olympic decathlon silver medalist Trey Hardee saying:
“Sad day for Russian athletes. The people in charge should be
punished, they created the culture of dope”.
A statement from European Athletics President Svein Arne Hansen said
it would be “unfair to allow the impression that doping is a problem
confined to Russia or to athletics.
“I must emphasize that this is a challenge to all sports in every
country,” he said.
Individual athletes, however, were quick to take to social media to
give their support for the ban.
[to top of second column] |
IAAF President Sebastian Coe (L) and Rune Andersen, head of the IAAF
taskforce on Russia, listens to a journalist question during a news
conference after the International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF) council meeting in Vienna, Austria, June 17,
2016. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
“I am sick of Russians whining about shattered dreams, opportunities
lost etc. Russians have been stealing clean athletes' dreams for
years,” said British marathon runner Mara Yamauchi.
British middle distance runner Lynsey Sharp, who has been previously
cheated out of medals by subsequently banned dopers, agreed, saying
in reply to the statement from the Russian athletics federation:
“And your country has destroyed 'clean athletes' dreams' for
decades. Not a nice feeling is it?"
Others took the opportunity to press the IOC to support the decision
and not find a way to invite Russian athletes to Rio.
“We applaud the IAAF actions today. We implore the IOC to do their
part and protect clean sport,” said Athletics Canada.
Former British heptathlete Kelly Sotherton said: "The IOC must be as
strong in the clean sport stance as IAAF. They should back clean
athletes not a doping culture with an easy let-in clause.”
There was some confusion about exactly what was involved in the
IAAF’s announcement that Russian athletes who trained and were
tested outside their own country might be able to be allowed to
compete, especially since only a tiny handful would qualify under
that criteria.
"The IAAF must ensure the conditions for them to qualify are
stringent enough so that absolutely no cheats slip through the net,”
said UK Athletics.
“We would wish to know much more about these conditions before being
able to welcome individual athlete invitations."
WADA issued a statement welcoming the ban and also revealed that
"preliminary findings" of an ongoing probe into Russian doping,
which were shared with the IAAF Task Force, showed that there is:
"Sufficient corroborated evidence to confirm...a mandatory
state-directed manipulation of laboratory analytical results
operating within the Moscow-accredited laboratory from at least 2011
forward including the period of the IAAF World Championships in
2013."
WADA also "wholeheartedly supported" the IAAF’s recommendation to
allow Russian whistle-blower Yuliya Stepanova to potentially compete
in the Olympics as an independent athlete.
(Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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