Ukad urges Wada to impose ‘strongest possible sanctions’ on Russia for state-sponsored doping

Wada’s committee recommended Russia receive a four-year Olympic ban, which would rule them out of Tokyo 2020

Rohith Nair
Friday 06 December 2019 08:58 EST
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WADA Report Outlines Alleged Russian Doping Cover Up System Used in Sochi

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The World Anti-Doping Agency must impose the “strongest possible sanctions” on Russia for its state-sponsored doping because athletes around the world have suffered as a result, the UK Anti-Doping [Ukad] agency said on Friday.

A Wada compliance committee recommended last week that Russia receive a four-year Olympic ban, which would keep it out of next year’s Tokyo Games, as part of a sanctions package to punish Moscow for having provided the agency with doctored and incomplete laboratory data.

The compliance committee’s recommendations will be put to the executive committee at meetings in Paris on Monday.

“The UK Anti-Doping Athlete Commission is calling on the members of the WADA Executive Committee [ExCo] to implement the strongest possible sanctions to protect sport when they meet next week,” it said in a statement.

“We all have a genuine interest in ensuring athlete welfare and fair play stay at the heart of the sports movement, regardless of nationality.

“As a result of the systematic and institutional Russian doping scandal, many athletes from many nationalities have had their medals, moment on the podium and health violated, and many Russian athletes have fallen victim to an oppressive doping system.”

Rusada was initially suspended after a 2015 WADA report found evidence of widespread state-sponsored doping in Russian sport involving athletes across many sports.

Ukad also called on the International Paralympic and Olympic Committees to impose sanctions on Russia.

“We believe Wada should implement a total ban of Russian athletes in all competitions until the international community... have confidence that cheating on this scale has been eliminated and that integrity in sport can begin to be restored,” it said.

Reuters

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