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  Sports   In Other sports  02 Dec 2016  IAAF continues suspension on Russian athletes

IAAF continues suspension on Russian athletes

AFP
Published : Dec 2, 2016, 12:05 pm IST
Updated : Dec 2, 2016, 1:22 pm IST

IAAF had imposed its initial ban on Russia in November 2015 and has extended it twice.

President Sebastian Coe of IAAF and Rune Andersen (Task Force) ruled to uphold the suspension on Russia (Photo: AFP)
 President Sebastian Coe of IAAF and Rune Andersen (Task Force) ruled to uphold the suspension on Russia (Photo: AFP)

Monaco: Russian athletes remain suspended from international athletics after the IAAF voted to extend the ban on the country for the state-sponsored doping which will be reviewed in February.

The IAAF Council, under the presidency of Sebastian Coe, yesterday ruled to uphold the suspension despite Russian President Vladimir Putin having recently approved a law criminalising doping in sports.

The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) imposed its initial ban on Russia in November 2015 and has twice extended it, in March and June, on the grounds that the criteria set for the track and field powerhouses to be reincluded had not been met.

The Russian athletics federation (RusAF) "has made further progress towards satisfying the reinstatement conditions since June 2016", said Norwegian Rune Andersen, the head of the IAAF Taskforce looking into the steps Russia is taking to combat doping.

The reinstatement conditions demand that RusAF comply in full with the World Anti-Doping Code and IAAF anti-doping rules, that the IAAF and the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) are able to conduct their anti-doping programmes and testing without interference, and as a result the reintegration of Russian athletes into international competitions will not jeopardise the integrity of those competitions.

The progress made, Andersen said, included "rolling out anti-doping education modules for coaches and athletes, securing cooperation by the Russian criminal authorities with their French counterparts and the Russian parliament, the Duma, passing a new law criminalising the supply of prohibited substances to athletes".

But it now had to prove that the IAAF and RUSADA, once reinstated, could "conduct their anti-doping programmes in Russia without outside interference".

The Taskforce will return to Russia in January "to assess the response to McLaren's final report due on December 9", Andersen said in reference to the final report by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren into Russia's state-sponsored doping programme.

Andersen will then report to the IAAF Council meeting in February. "At that time it hopes to be able to identify a clear roadmap and timetable for RusAF's reinstatement," Andersen said.

Tags: sebastian coe, doping ban, iaaf