Rio Paralympics 2016: Russian athletes banned after doping scandal
published. 7 Aug 2016
Rio will host the 15th edition of the summer Paralympic GameRussian athletes have been banned from competing at the Rio 2016 Paralympics following the country's doping scandal.The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) had opened suspension proceedings following the McLaren report, and has now confirmed the ban.That report, published last month, detailed a state-sponsored doping programme operated by Russia.The Russian Paralympic Committee will reportedly appeal against the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.In contrast to the IPC, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) chose not to hand Russia a blanket ban from the Olympic Games.The
Rio 2016 Paralympics begin in 31 days' time, on 7 September, and 267
Russian athletes across 18 sports will now miss the Games."The
anti-doping system in Russia is broken, corrupted and entirely
compromised," said IPC president Sir Philip Craven at a news conference
on Sunday."The Russian Paralympic Committee are unable to ensure
compliance with and enforcement of the IPC anti-doping code and the
world anti-doping code within their own national jurisdiction and they
can not fulfil its fundamental obligation as an IPC member."As a result, the Russian Paralympic Committee is suspended with immediate effect."Craven's damning wordsHe
added: "Tragically this situation is not about athletes cheating a
system, but about a state-run system that is cheating the athletes. The
doping culture that is polluting Russian sport stems from the Russian
government."The Russian government has catastrophically failed
its para-athletes. Their 'medals over morals' mentality disgusts me. The
complete corruption of the anti-doping system is contrary to the rules
and strikes at the very heart of the spirit of Paralympic sport."It
shows a blatant disregard for the health and wellbeing of athletes and,
quite simply, has no place in Paralympic sport. Their thirst for glory
at all costs has severely damaged the integrity and image of all sport,
and has certainly resulted in a devastating outcome for the Russian
Paralympic Committee and para-athletes."Why was Russia banned?Canadian
law professor Richard McLaren's report found that Russia's sports
ministry manipulated urine samples provided by its athletes between 2011
and 2015.The report identified 27 samples relating to eight
para-sports, five of which are summer sports, including some governed by
the IPC.The IPC has also found evidence that samples were
swapped during the Sochi 2014 Paralympic Games and it planned to
reanalyse every Russian sample from Sochi.The IPC allowed the Russian Paralympic Committee to present its case before it decided on the ban.Paralympics takes a standThe IOC was widely criticised for ignoring the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) recommendation to ban Russia from the Rio Olympics.Instead, each individual sporting federation was given the power to decide if Russian competitors were clean to compete.A three-person IOC panel then had the final say.In the end, more than 270 Russian athletes were cleared to compete at the Olympics.ReactionUS Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) chief executive Travis Tygart said the IPC's decision was "inspiring"."The
IPC showed strong leadership today in holding Russia's state-organised
doping accountable," said Tygart. "Their unanimous decision goes a long
way towards inspiring us all - most importantly clean athletes - and
upholding the Paralympic values we admire."Wada said it supported the decision, adding it was "is in the interest of clean athletes and the clean sport movement".The British Paralympic Association said the IPC had taken a bold decision and congratulated it for taking a "clear stand"."It
is crucial for the integrity of our sport that those involved, as well
as the public, feel confident that all necessary measures are in place
to tackle doping and the playing field is level", a statement read.
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