Russia anti-doping body unlikely to be
cleared before Rio: WADA chief
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[May 14, 2016]
LONDON (Reuters) - The head of the
World Anti-Doping Agency said on Saturday that Russia's anti-doping
authority was unlikely to be declared compliant with world sports rules
before the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games.
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President of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) Craig Reedie gestures
during an interview with Reuters at the WADA symposium in Lausanne,
Switzerland, March 14, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse |
"As far as the Russian anti-doping agency is concerned, I think it
highly unlikely that that organization would be compliant by the
time of the games in Rio," WADA President Craig Reedie told BBC
radio in an interview on Saturday.
A report on Russia's compliance with doping rules would be sent to
the International Olympic Committee which would then rule on whether
the country's track and field athletes can take part in the Aug.
5-21 Games in Brazil, he said.
It would also be sent to the International Association of Athletics
Federations which has to take a decision on whether to lift a
suspension on Russia's track and field federation.
 Allegations about systemic doping in Russian sport have been
rumbling for months, but Moscow has been able to argue that the
witnesses were unreliable and if there was wrongdoing, it was just a
few isolated cases.
But comments by Grigory Rodchenkov, the former head of Russian
sport's anti-doping laboratory, in what he described as an extensive
program to cheat at the Sochi Olympics takes the crisis over drugs
in Russian sport to a new level of severity.
A Kremlin spokesman denied Rodchenkov's allegations, made in an
interview with the New York Times, saying they amounted to "slander
by a turncoat".
The chair of WADA's athletes committee said on Thursday that Russian
athletes should be banned from the Rio Olympics unless there are
guarantees that they are drug free.
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Further allegations of drug use by Russian athletes appeared in U.S.
media this week and Reedie told the BBC he was "horrified" by the
claims, which have been denied by Russia.
"If these allegations are true, and they have to be investigated,
then what has appeared to have happened is absolutely unacceptable
and people can draw their own conclusions from those facts," he
said.
Reedie also said he assumed a large percentage of the Russian team
would be clean athletes.
(Writing by William Schomberg; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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