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IOC set to decide whether to ban Russia from Winter Olympics

World Materials 5 December 2017 15:56 (UTC +04:00)
Facing intense pressure, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) today will decide whether to ban Russia from the Winter Olympics this February as punishment for the country’s alleged state-sponsored cover up of doping by its athletes
IOC set to decide whether to ban Russia from Winter Olympics

Facing intense pressure, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) today will decide whether to ban Russia from the Winter Olympics this February as punishment for the country’s alleged state-sponsored cover up of doping by its athletes, abc NEWS reports.

The IOC’s executive board will meet Tuesday in Lausanne, Switzerland to hear final reports from two commissions investigating Russian doping and to decide on what sanctions Russia should face ahead of the Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Russian athletes could be barred entirely from the competition or forced to compete under a neutral flag.

The anti-doping agencies of 17 countries, including the United States, have demanded the IOC impose a blanket ban, issuing a collective statement in September that it was time for the body to stop “paying lip-service” to the anti-doping fight.

World Anti-Doping Agency rules Russia is noncompliant with code

Russia responds to claims of doping at 2014 Winter Olympics

Last year, an investigation commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) found evidence that Russia had concealed doping by hundreds of its athletes for years, aided by the country’s intelligence services, with the cover-up reaching a crescendo during the 2014 Winter Olympics that Russia hosted in Sochi. That report by the Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren found the scheme had been overseen by Russia’s sports ministry and affected as many as 1,000 athletes across 30 sports.

Last summer, facing similar calls to exclude Russia from the Rio Olympics, the IOC pushed the decision onto the international federations of individual sports, allowing them to choose which Russian athletes could compete. Although virtually Russia’s entire track and field team were barred from the Rio Games, in the end the country was able to field around 70 percent of its Olympic team.

This time, anti-doping agencies and many athletes are demanding the IOC impose a tougher penalty, arguing that Russia has not done enough to clean up its act.

Russia has refused to accept McClaren’s key finding that the cover-up was carried out with government support, claiming that it was done by individual coaches, athletes and officials. Instead, Russian officials have denounced McClaren’s report as a U.S.-led plot meant to discredit Russia. In October, President Vladimir Putin suggested the doping allegations were meant to harm his chances in elections next year.

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