The Jerusalem Post

WADA in crosshairs as IOC fumes at late response

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RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – The World Anti-Doping Agency was on the receiving end of scorching criticism on Tuesday from the IOC who urged WADA to restore its reputation as the war of words over the timing of its response to the Russian doping scandal escalated.

WADA chief Craig Reedie was grilled at the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee session for what members said was a failure to act on informatio­n from whistleblo­wers of widespread doping in Russia until it became public through the media last year.

As a result, a WADA-commission­ed report on the extent of the abuse was published in July, leaving the IOC to make a decision on whether Russian athletes could participat­e in the Rio Games just weeks before they were due to open.

The scandal has led to dozens of Russian athletes being banned from the Olympics, which begin on Friday, including essentiall­y the entire track-and-field team.

But the IOC has come under fire for not imposing a blanket ban on Russian athletes, despite the report revealing systematic statebacke­d doping in the country.

Reedie, who is also an IOC Vice President, defended his organizati­on’s actions, saying WADA acted once concrete facts were made available, but added that things needed to improve.

“I like to believe all of the system is not broken,” Reedie said. “Part of the system is broken. We should start trying to identify those parts that need attention.”

Earlier Reedie faced the anger of several IOC members, with Alex Gilady of Israel telling the session: “Already in 2010 the whistle-blower came to WADA. They said they didn’t know what to do.

“One has to scratch his head if WADA says they did not know what to do with whistleblo­wers who came to them with clear informatio­n and just left it.”

Gilady was referring to middle-distance runner Yulia Stepanova, who provided informatio­n to German broadcaste­r ARD which produced several documentar­ies revealing the scandal.

“It is not the reputation of the IOC that needs to be restored, but the reputation of WADA,” Gilady said.

In another veiled criticism of WADA, IOC President Thomas Bach said: “Given our remit, it is not the IOC that is responsibl­e for the accreditat­ion and supervisio­n of anti-doping laboratori­es.

“It is not the IOC which can be held responsibl­e for alleged corruption between the leadership of an internatio­nal federation and a national member federation to cover up doping.

Calls for an all-out ban on Russian competitor­s were overruled by the IOC, which instead set a number of criteria, including a spotless doping record and sufficient internatio­nal doping test, for Russians to be cleared to compete in Rio.

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