
The commission, set up by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), found a “deeply rooted culture of cheating” in Russian athletics, which it said Russian state security services colluded with, and also identified what it called systemic failures in the global governing body, the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF).
At one point, the commission said, the WADA-accredited anti-doping laboratory in Moscow destroyed 1,417 samples shortly before an inspection. “This was done on a Saturday morning immediately prior to the arrival in Moscow of a WADA audit team,” said the report.
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Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko said there was no evidence for the accusations against the Russian Athletics Federation, and that the samples had been destroyed at WADA’s request.
IAAF President Sebastian Coe said he was alarmed and surprised by the scale of the revelations, which come days after the IAAF’s long-time president, Lamine Diack, was accused by the IAAF of concealing a Russian athlete’s doping violations.
“These are dark days,” said Coe, Diack’s successor. He gave Russia until the end of the week to respond to the accusations, and said the IAAF Council would then discuss possible sanctions.
Dick Pound, the head of the commission that produced the report and a former president of WADA, referred to a corruption scandal now shaking football’s governing body, FIFA.
“I hope all sports will look at their governance and their anti-doping systems because their existence may be at risk,” he told a news conference.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 11th, 2015.
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