Blindsided WADA demands corrections
to U.S. anti-doping report
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[June 27, 2020]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said on Friday it
was blindsided by a U.S. report that was riddled with misleading
information and inaccuracies and which threatened to cut its
funding.
In a strong rebuke to the White House Office of National Drug
Control Policy (ONDCP) report to the U.S. Congress made public on
Wednesday, WADA president Witold Banka accused ONDCP director James
Carroll of knowingly ignoring errors in the document.
"You chose not to incorporate our clarifications. As the saying
goes, ‘why let the truth get in the way of a good story’?," Banka
said in the letter to Carroll seen by Reuters.
"I should think that you would want the U.S. Congress, and/or the
appropriations committee, to deliberate and decide on WADA funding
based on accurate information," added Banka.
WADA produced a 46-page rebuttal to the ONDCP's 19-page report,
Witold urging Carroll to make the necessary corrections and deliver
the updated version to Congress and to let him know when done.
As the largest single contributor to WADA's $37.4 million budget at
just over $2.7 million this year, the ONDCP expressed concern over
how U.S. taxpayer dollars were being spent and urged WADA to
immediately act on badly needed reforms.
WADA insists the reforms are well underway and U.S. approved. They
include term limits for all members of the Foundation Board,
executive committee and standing committees, formation of an
Independent Ethics Board and the addition of two independent seats
to the ExCo.
The U.S. also complained that as WADA's major benefactor, outside of
the International Olympic Committee which contributes half the
agency's budget, it is under-represented and wanted a proportionate
voice in the decision-making.
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WADA President-Elect,
Witold Banka attends a news conference after World Anti-Doping
Agency's extraordinary Executive Committee (ExCo) meeting that has
banned Russian athletes from all major sporting events in the next
four years, in Lausanne, Switzerland, December 9, 2019.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Banka said he was taken completely off guard by ONDCP criticism
given that the U.S. in 2018 had approved WADA’s proposed governance
reforms and more recently voted in favour of a new strategic plan
for 2020-2024.
"The U.S.’s behavior around the Board table over the past years is
simply irreconcilable with the allegations outlined within the
report," said Banka.
WADA reminded Carroll that the U.S. has a spot on the Foundation
Board and that it was outrageous to think rich nations could buy
seats on various committees.
Banka noted that the U.S. government chose not to submit any
nominations for the chairs to any WADA standing committees for 2020
yet still has greater representation (11) on governance bodies than
any other nation.
Banka also warned the U.S. that before casting stones it should
first get its own doping house in order, hinting the country has
much work to do at home to ensure clean sport.
"One obvious way for the U.S. government to contribute more to the
fight against doping in sport may well lie in increased efforts to
protect young Americans that practise sport in an environment where
the rules fall short of those established by WADA," Banka said.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, Editing by Ed Osmond)
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