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		 IOC 
		re-tests Beijing, London samples ahead of Rio 
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		[March 16, 2016] 
		By Karolos Grohmann
 BERLIN (Reuters) - Re-testing of hundreds 
		of athletes' samples collected at the London 2012 and Beijing 2008 Games 
		is underway as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) bids to root 
		out cheats ahead of Rio 2016.
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			 Doping has overshadowed the run-up to the Olympics with scandals 
			involving the IAAF, the ruling body of athletics, track and field 
			competitors plus several countries including Russia and Kenya who 
			could be excluded from the Games. 
 "The aim of the (re-testing) program is to prevent athletes who 
			cheated in London or Beijing, and got away with it because we didn't 
			have as advanced methods of analysis as we do now, from competing in 
			Rio de Janeiro," IOC medical director Richard Budgett told an 
			anti-doping symposium in Lausanne on Tuesday.
 
 "The results will come in a number of weeks or months."
 
 Athletics, the showpiece sport of the Olympics, was rocked last year 
			when Russia was suspended from the sport after a World Anti-Doping 
			Agency (WADA) investigation uncovered a state-sponsored doping 
			program.
 
			
			   Kenya could also be banned if it does not deliver on promises to 
			WADA.
 Tennis was dragged through the mud last week when former world 
			number one Maria Sharapova announced she had tested positive for the 
			banned substance meldonium.
 
 "We are trying passionately to protect those clean athletes who are 
			going to Rio 2016," Budgett said. "The best way to do that is to 
			catch the cheats and deter the cheats before we get to Rio de 
			Janeiro."
 
 The IOC said it welcomed a new WADA task force that would gather 
			information and intelligence and identify athletes who should be 
			included in registered testing pools, and those that should be 
			tested during the four-week period of Rio 2016.
 
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			Olympic samples are frozen by the IOC for eight years and re-tested 
			using new methods. It also looks for substances that were not known 
			at the time of competition.
 Beijing samples were re-tested a few months after the 2008 Games, 
			yielding five positive tests including Bahrain's 1500 meters 
			champion Rashid Ramzi.
 
 Five athletes were also caught after a similar process was 
			undertaken following the 2004 Athens Olympics.
 
 The first Games in South America will be held from Aug. 5-21.
 
 (Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Editing by Tony Jimenez)
 
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