A decision to ban Russian track and field athletes from Rio 2016 over
the country’s alleged state-sponsored doping regime has been upheld by
the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Russia’s athletics federation was suspended by the sport’s world
governing body, the IAAF, after an independent report found evidence of
widespread doping.
The Russian Olympic Committee and 68 athletes appealed against that
decision but after hearing evidence from both sides, CAS has ruled the
ban can stand.
Separately, the International Olympic Committee is considering calls
to ban all Russian competitors across all sports from the Olympic Games
following a second report into state-sponsored doping.
“The CAS panel confirmed that the ROC is not entitled to nominate
Russian track and field athletes to compete at the Rio 2016 Olympic
Games considering that they are not eligible to participate under the
IAAF competition rules,” a spokesman said.
The IAAF said it was “pleased CAS has supported its position”, saying
the judgement had “created a level playing field for athletes”.
IAAF President, Lord Coe, added: “This is not a day for triumphant
statements. I didn’t come into this sport to stop athletes from
competing.
“Beyond Rio, the IAAF taskforce will continue to work with Russia to
establish a clean safe environment for its athletes so that its
federation and team can return to international recognition and
competition.”
The end of the road for Russia’s athletes?
Despite the ban, the IAAF had previously said a handful of the
country’s athletes could compete in Rio as neutrals if they meet a
number of criteria, including being repeatedly tested outside their
homeland.
At least two Russian athletes – 800m runner and doping whistleblower
Yuliya Stepanova and US-based long jumper Darya Klishina – have already
taken advantage of that decision and the CAS ruling has cleared the way
for more to follow.
CAS said the ROC would still be able to nominate “Russian track and
field athletes who fulfil the criteria” to compete as neutrals at the
Games.
But a CAS spokesman added the panel had “expressed concerns” that the
short timeframe “left no possibility for the athletes to comply with
the criteria”.
The Games begin on August 5.
Why were Russian athletes banned?
Russia was suspended from global track and field events by the IAAF in November 2015.
That followed the publication of an independent World Anti-Doping
Agency (WADA) report that showed a culture of widespread,
state-sponsored doping, with even the secret services involved.
The country’s Sports Minister, Vitaly Mutko, has since apologised for
the fact cheating athletes were not caught by Russia’s anti-doping
systems but stopped short of admitting the scandal had been
state-sponsored.
However, another WADA-commissioned report delivered earlier this week
– the McLaren report – contained more allegations and suggested senior
figures in Russia’s sports ministry were complicit in an organised
doping cover-up, with secret service agents even involved in swapping
positive urine samples for clean ones. It implicated the majority of
Olympic sports in the cover-up.
Following that report, the International Olympic Committee faced
calls to ban all Russian competitors from the Olympic Games. It held an
emergency meeting on Tuesday but said it would wait for Thursday’s
judgement from CAS and look at all the legal option before announcing
any sanctions.
It will hold a second emergency meeting on Sunday, reports the BBC.
How has Russia responded?
The Russian authorities have already suggested that they will look at ways to continue legal action.
Following the ruling, sports minister Mutko said the CAS decision had
set “a certain precedent” by punishing a collective group for doping
offences by individuals.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov added: “The principle of collective
responsibility cannot be acceptable. The news is not very good.”
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