Vladimir Putin signals Russia will appeal against four-year Wada ban
Russian president Vladimir Putin has said his country have ’reason
to appeal’ against the four-year ban imposed by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Wada’s executive committee unanimously accepted a recommendation from its
independent compliance review committee on Monday to impose sanctions on
Russia.
They include barring teams under a Russian flag from competing at
the Olympic and Paralympic Games of 2020 and 2022 and the football World Cup in
2022, among other global sporting events. The country would also be blocked
from hosting international sporting competitions. Individual athletes may be
able to compete in events if they can prove they are not implicated or affected
by the manipulated laboratory data which led to the sanctions being imposed.
Russia has 21 days to respond to the proposed sanctions, and the
most powerful man in the country has already indicated an appeal will be
lodged.
Putin told the TASS news agency: “We have all the reasons to file
an appeal to Cas (the Court of Arbitration for Sport). There are other
considerations as well, but it is important that this issue is analysed by
specialists, lawyers who would talk with our partners having this knowledge.”
The sanctions relate to tampering with data obtained from the
Moscow laboratory in 2019. Investigators from Wada found that some of the
deletion and manipulation occurred after Russia had been reinstated to
compliance in September 2018, having initially been banned in 2015.
Putin said he did not agree with collective punishment, adding:
“The main thing, in my opinion, and it seems to me that everyone agrees with
it, is that any punishment – since the times of Roman law – should be
individual and based on what that individual did.
“Punishment cannot be collective and affect those people who have
nothing to do with certain violations. I think that Wada specialists understand
this as well. If some of them make such decisions on collective punishment,
then it seems to me that there are grounds to believe that [it is] not care for
clean global sports is behind this, but rather political considerations that
have nothing to do with the interests of sports and the Olympic movement.”
Russia will still be able to compete at Euro 2020 next summer, and
St Petersburg can stage matches, as the European Championship is not a global
competition. It is run by Uefa rather than Fifa.
In her speech to Monday’s Wada meeting in Lausanne, Wada
vice-president Linda Helleland made it clear that in her view the sanctions did
not go far enough.
“I would have liked to see the consequences to be even tougher than
put forward by the CRC,” she said.“I would have preferred to support a blanket
ban. A blanket ban can make the Russian leadership realise the seriousness of
the mess they have created – for themselves and for their athletes.”
The chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency Travis
Tygart branded Wada’s punishment as “yet another devastating blow to clean
athletes, the integrity of sport and the rule of law” and called for “a revolt
against this broken system to force reform”.