IOC
offers Rio lifeline to Russian track and field athletes
Send a link to a friend
[June 22, 2016]
By Karolos Grohmann
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) -
Individual Russian track and field athletes assessed as clean will
be able to compete for their country in Brazil, the Olympic Games'
top official said on Tuesday, diluting a blanket ban the sport's
global federation had called for.
International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach also said
all competitors from both Russia and Kenya would, given their
countries' recent history of doping, have to be screened
individually before being allowed to participate in the Games.
He did not elaborate on what the evaluation would include.
The Russian track and field team remains suspended from Rio de
Janeiro after the IOC supported the ban, for systemic doping, which
world athletics federation IAAF had extended on Friday.
But Bach, speaking at the end of a summit on doping, offered a
limited number of Russian athletes the chance to race under their
flag.
In a decision welcomed by the sports ministry in Moscow, he said
those cleared by the IAAF or the Court of Arbitration for Sport as
clean and eligible would be able to compete in Brazil.
The unsatisfactory record of anti-doping bodies in Russia, as well
as Kenya, had put "very serious doubts on the presumption of
innocence" of their athletes, Bach said.
But they had the right of appeal and "if there are (Russian)
athletes qualified then they will compete as members of the Russian
Olympic Committee team," he told reporters.
The IAAF had said on Friday that any Russian athlete would have to
compete under a neutral flag, a recommendation it reiterated on
Tuesday following Bach's comments.
"This decision has been unequivocally supported across sport and the
IOC Summit today unanimously agreed to fully respect the IAAF
decision," the federation said in a statement.
'SWIFT ACTION'
The Russian sports ministry, which had criticised the IAAF ban, said
its Olympians were "ready to go over and above all the normal
anti-doping tests to show their commitment to clean and fair sport."
[to top of second column] |
President of the Russian Olympic Committee Alexander Zhukov attends
the Olympic Summit in Lausanne, Switzerland June 21, 2016.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
"We have long stated that individual athletes in Russia are willing
to demonstrate their innocence and prove they are clean," it said.
In Nairobi, Kenyan officials said they would cooperate fully with
the IOC's stipulation.
"If that is the requirement for us to go to Rio, we shall fully
cooperate. We have always done our best in the fight against
doping," said Jackson Tuwei, the president of Athletics Kenya.
The IOC also ordered international federations to swiftly ban
athletes found positive in re-testing of samples from the 2008 and
2012 Olympics.
A total of 55 athletes had tested positive for performance-enhancing
drugs in those re-tests in recent weeks, none of whom would compete
in Rio, the IOC said.
Bach also said the summit, including sports federations and national
Olympic committees, had decided to review the anti-doping system,
calling on the World Anti-Doping Agency to hold a global conference
next year.
The IOC President said they had not discussed the potential
participation in Rio of whistleblower Yulia Stepanova, a former
drugs cheat whose revelations sparked the scandal, after the IAAF
gave her hope of competing at the Games.
(Editing by Richard Balmforth and John Stonestreet)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|