Russian athletics begins purge of doping scandal coaches and officials
Vitaly Mutk / Russian Sports Minister |
Russia’s athletics federation has
met in Moscow to begin what the sports minister said would be a purge of its
staff after the country was suspended from international competition over
doping.
Russia will undertake reforms and
appeal to the International Association of Athletics Federations within three
months to return to competition, the sports minister, Vitaly Mutko, said. At
stake is the country’s participation at the world indoor championships in March
and the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in August.
Mutko summoned the presidium of the
All-Russia Athletic Federation on Sunday following the IAAF decision to
indefinitely suspend Russians because of widespread violations found by a World
Anti-Doping Agency commission. Mutko said on Saturday he and the IAAF
president, Sebastian Coe, had agreed on a “road map” for reform.
The UK Athletics chairman, Ed
Warner, insisted that making Russian athletes miss the 2016 Rio Olympics to
ensure a clean Tokyo 2020 Games would be a “price worth paying”. “If you’ve got to have pain in Rio
to ensure Tokyo is clean, so be it,” said Warner, who said he does not want a
“murky compromise” to allow Russia’s return.
But Mutko told the news agency Tass
that the Russian athletics federation is taking steps to ensure it will return
to international competition before Rio, including replacing coaches and
officials. He added he hoped its leadership would be 99% new after elections at
a conference on 16 January at which a temporary federation president and
presidium will be elected.
“Some may suffer in this situation,
but we will remove all those whose reputation is under suspicion from the
athletics management system,” Mutko said on the state television channel
Rossiya 24.
“Within 60 days we will conduct a
renewal of athletics, we will bring in new, modern people, we will work with
the international federation to take all measures by its standards. We will
take all measures recommended to us by Wada and the IAAF and in 60 days, or in
three months, we will come to the international federation again so we can show
that we’re meeting standards, and we hope our team will regain its rights.”
Mutko also told Rossiya 24 that
Russia could turn the management of its athletics federation over to the
Russian Olympic Committee, which has promised that all athletes, officials,
coaches and other personnel involved in doping “will be banned from all
activity related to sport and will be punished”. It is expected to lead reforms
of Russia’s athletics federation, anti-doping agency and drug-testing lab.
The International Olympic Committee
president, Thomas Bach, has rowed back on his comments of Saturday that he was
confident that Russia’s reform process would make the country compliant in time
to compete in Rio.
Bach insisted Russian track and
field athletes would only return if the country falls into line with all
anti-doping rules and its reforms are verifiable. “The important goal is not
bringing them back,” Bach said. “The goal has to be Russia being compliant
again with all the international anti-doping regulations. If the Russian
athletics federation is not compliant and the athletes cannot take part in any
kind of qualifications, then the situation is clear. If you cannot qualify, you
cannot participate in the Games.”
The IAAF is expected to demand
Russia apologises for its behaviour, ends state interference in track and field
and investigates athletes suspected of doping before it is allowed back in to
competition.
Richard McLaren, a member of the
Wada commission, has warned it could even recommend that the IOC suspends the
IAAF when it releases part two of its report, which is expected late this year.
Mutko does not believe it will come to that. “If there are no athletics [for
us] in Rio, it will be a complete breakdown of the Olympics,” he said. “That
cannot be allowed.”
Source: theguardian.com
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