Doping: WADA says it has recovered doping data from Moscow lab
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[January 18, 2019]
By Steve Keating
TORONTO (Reuters) - World Anti-Doping
Agency (WADA) inspectors have recovered doping data from a
discredited Moscow laboratory, WADA said on Thursday - a condition
of its controversial decision in September to restore the
accreditation of Russia's anti-doping agency (RUSADA).
"This is a major breakthrough for clean sport," said WADA President
Craig Reedie in a statement. "It shows we are continuing to make
real progress that simply would not have happened without the 20
September executive committee decision."
RUSADA was suspended in 2015 after a WADA-commissioned report
outlined evidence of systematic, state-backed doping in Russian
athletics. Another report the following year documented more than
1,000 doping cases across dozens of sports, notably at the Winter
Olympics that Russia hosted in Sochi in 2014.
With the data secured, albeit two weeks after an agreed deadline,
WADA's executive committee will now consider recommendations on
RUSADA's status from its compliance committee.
Were RUSADA to lose its accreditation again, so soon after being
reinstated to howls of outrage from athletes and administrators,
Russian sport would face the prospect of new sanctions.
Russia, one of the leading sporting powers, was banned from sending
an official team to last year's Winter Games in Pyeongchang, and
many Russians were excluded from the 2016 Rio Games. Most Russian
athletes have also been excluded from international track and field
competitions since 2015.
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A woman walks into the head office of the World Anti-Doping Agency
(WADA) in Montreal, Quebec, Canada November 9, 2015. REUTERS/Christinne
Muschi/File Photo
Due to a threat of Russian interference in the collection of data
and concerns for the inspectors' safety, the CRC had said it would
not send a report to the executive committee before the team had
completed its work and was on its way home.
The executive committee will hold a teleconference and make their
ruling on Jan. 22.
WADA will now examine the data for any sign of tampering, while
Russian authorities must ensure that any re-analysis of samples
required by WADA is completed - in an accredited laboratory - by
June 30.
WADA said data from the laboratory will be crucial to building
strong cases against cheats, and exonerate other athletes suspected
of having participated in doping.
Russia has accepted there was extensive doping in the country, but
its authorities have continued to deny that any of it was
state-sponsored.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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