Should Russia be reinstated without publicly admitting wrongdoing for its state-sponsored doping scheme?
That question has caused ferocious infighting at the World Anti-Doping Agency, the watchdog body tasked with stopping any repeat of the widespread drug use and coverups which tarnished a sporting superpower.
WADA鈥檚 board is due to vote on the issue Thursday in the Seychelles. If it votes yes, it might push world track and field body the IAAF to welcome back Russia too.
Russia鈥檚 anti-doping agency, RUSADA, was suspended in November 2015 when a WADA report found top athletes could take banned drugs with near-impunity since RUSADA and the national laboratory would cover for them. Later investigations found evidence that dirty samples were switched for clean ones when Russia hosted the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
The reinstatement of RUSADA is championed by WADA鈥檚 president Craig Reedie, who has softened two key conditions for Russia, and the move has the tacit backing of the International Olympic Committee.
https://www.pentictonwesternnews.com/sports/russias-olympic-ban-lifted-after-doping-scandal/
But despite a recommendation for reinstatement from a key WADA committee, it has provoked anger from other anti-doping figures who feel Russia can鈥檛 be trusted to reform without accepting more of the blame.
Athletes on one of WADA鈥檚 own commissions, Russian doping whistleblower Grigory Rodchenkov and the WADA vice-president Linda Helleland, lead the opposition.
鈥淚 am afraid that by opting for the easiest way out, it will ultimately hurt WADA in the future,鈥 said Helleland, a Norwegian politician who is eyeing a bid to replace Reedie as the organization鈥檚 president.
Reedie softened his stance on Russia 鈥渋n the spirit of compromise,鈥 as he wrote to Russian Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov in June.
That means dropping a demand for Russia to accept a report which accused the state of directing doping, and instead allowing it to accept an IOC document with milder conclusions. Reedie deemed it satisfactory after Kolobkov wrote that he 鈥渇ully accepted鈥 the IOC report, and Russia won鈥檛 be expected to make any public statement or address exactly who in the vast state sports structure was to blame.
Critical of the move toward reinstating RUSADA, whistleblower Rodchenkov said Russia鈥檚 priority is 鈥減rotecting their top-level apparatchiks who destroyed the Olympic Games in Sochi.鈥
WADA鈥檚 Reedie also accepted Russia can be reinstated without providing some key evidence from the Moscow laboratory at the centre of the allegations. Instead, Russia promises to deliver it only after it鈥檚 reinstated.
Russian law enforcement 鈥 and President Vladimir Putin 鈥 haven鈥檛 changed their argument that the main guilty party was WADA鈥檚 star whistleblower Rodchenkov. Russian law enforcement alleges that he tricked clean Russian athletes into taking drugs for unclear reasons, then faked evidence of abuses at the Sochi Olympics.
Rodchenkov is in hiding in the United States, while other whistleblowers like the runners Yulia Stepanova and Andrei Dmitriev, have been vilified at home after reporting abuses by teammates. They say they have been forced to leave Russia for their own safety.
Putin ordered his own investigation in 2016 and some sports ministry officials, including then-deputy sports minister Yuri Nagornykh, were suspended. However, that investigation never reported any public conclusions and the officials quietly resigned later that year. Vitaly Mutko, who was sports minister during the Sochi Olympics, was swiftly promoted to deputy prime minister.
https://www.pentictonwesternnews.com/sports/appeals-by-45-russian-athletes-against-olympic-bans-rejected/
It鈥檚 largely a symbolic battle for RUSADA but could set a precedent in track and field, where Russia has been suspended since 2015. RUSADA鈥檚 reinstatement is one of the conditions the IAAF set before it will allow Russia鈥檚 team back to full strength, rather than its current neutral status.
That status means Russian track and field athletes cannot compete in international competitions under the Russian flag and have to be cleared as independent athletes.
If Russia is listed as compliant, WADA is also likely to drop its recommendation that the country shouldn鈥檛 be awarded hosting rights for new competitions. Some major sports have already flouted that measure without any apparent consequences.
The small world of anti-doping officials may be in uproar, but at RUSADA itself all is calm.
A WADA decision last year quietly restored almost all of the agency鈥檚 powers without a formal reinstatement since the number of test samples taken in Russia had plummeted. Speaking earlier this month, RUSADA鈥檚 CEO Yuri Ganus said just about the only effects of Russia鈥檚 鈥渘on-compliant鈥 status were extra monitoring of the agency鈥檚 work and problems asking for assistance from foreign agencies.
RUSADA is on track to be among the most active agencies in the world this year after collecting 7,013 in the first eight months of 2018. That鈥檚 almost as many as RUSADA did in the run-up to the Sochi Olympics, when it鈥檚 accused of routinely 鈥渟aving鈥 dopers.
WADA says this time the Russian doping test results can be trusted.
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James Ellingworth, The Associated Press
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