Russia defends transparency of Sochi
doping controls
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[May 10, 2016]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's sports
ministry said on Monday it was "certain" about the transparency of its
doping controls during the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, and that
independent observers had managed the testing operation daily.
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A man walks past a shop with an Olympic logo in the Black Sea resort
town of Sochi December 21, 2013. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov |
The ministry was responding to allegations of a testing cover-up
at the Sochi Games that included the use of intelligence agents from
the country's Federal Security Service, known as the FSB.
"We are... certain about the transparency of doping controls during
the Olympic Games," the ministry said in a statement. "In addition
to Russian specialists, doping control stations also employed
foreign experts.
"Furthermore, a team of independent observers managed the doping
control operations on a daily basis during the Games."
Whistleblower Vitaly Stepanov told CBS News in an interview aired on
Sunday that the former head of Russia's drug testing laboratory,
Grigory Rodchenkov, had informed him he had evidence of a testing
cover-up during more than 15 hours of taped conversations.
Rodchenkov also said that at least four Russian gold medalists in
2014 were using steroids, CBS News investigative program '60
Minutes' reported.
Reuters was unable to independently confirm the disclosures in the
'60 Minutes' report. Neither Rodchenkov nor Stepanov were
immediately available for comment on Sunday.
Stepanov told '60 Minutes' that Rodchenkov had told him "FSB agents
worked as doping control officers during the Sochi Games, that FSB
tried to control every single step of the anti-doping process in
Sochi".
FULL INVESTIGATION
Stepanov previously worked for Russia's anti-doping agency (RUSADA)
and is now living in the United States.
"Since the revelations by Stepanov originally appeared in 2015, a
full investigation has been carried out into activities by the
Russian state, RUSADA and all relevant parties," the ministry said
in its statement.
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"Subsequently, we agreed a 'road map' with WADA (the World
Anti-Doping Agency) to reform the anti-doping process so that the
tests are being carried out by UKAD (UK Anti-Doping), using samples
gathered by foreign companies, and analyzing all tests in accredited
labs.
"These efforts thus ensure the independence and transparency of
doping control in Russia, which is fully supported by the state."
Russia is banned from all track and field competitions, including
the Rio Olympics in August, after an independent WADA commission
last November revealed widespread state-sponsored doping.
UKAD is ensuring that targeted and intelligence-led testing is being
carried out on Russian athletes inside and outside the country.
Russian athletes will be allowed to return to competition when the
country can prove it has met several conditions regarding its
anti-doping operation, WADA and the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF) have said.
WADA spokesman Ben Nichols told Reuters on Sunday that the
allegations about Russian intelligence involvement in a doping
cover-up, and that four Sochi gold medalists were doping, were "very
disturbing" and that his organization would look into them.
(Reporting by Ian Chadband; Editing by Catherine Evans and Tony
Jimenez)
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