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IOC Ignores own Doping Rules 10 Countries Should Have Been Excluded from Olympics

At least five sports disciplines and 10 countries should have been banned from the Beijing Olympics, but the International Olympic Committee reportedly ignored its own charter.

The opening ceremony at the Beijing Olympics. Ten countries and five disciplines should have been barred due to failure to live up to the IOC's rules on anti-doping.
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The opening ceremony at the Beijing Olympics. Ten countries and five disciplines should have been barred due to failure to live up to the IOC's rules on anti-doping.

Russia and nine other countries should have been excluded from last year's Olympics in China, along with all of the participants in five disciplines, but the International Olympic Committee chose to ignore its own charter on doping.

"Sometimes there are powers in the sporting world that are stronger than the rules," says Henrik Brandt, director of Denmark's Sports Analysis Institute.

The Olympic Charter stipulates that a country which has not implemented the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) codex is barred from sending athletes to the Olympic Games. At the same time, IOC rules determine that a discipline whose international organization does not follow the same codex is also barred from taking part.

Rule 44 of the IOC Charter states clearly that: "The World Anti-Doping Code is mandatory for the whole Olympic Movement."

Rule 46 adds: "The choice of all sports for the program, as well as the determination of the criteria and conditions for the inclusion of any sport in the program, falls within the competence of the Session. Only sports that adopt and implement the World Anti-Doping Code can be included or remain in the program."

Had the IOC rules been followed, a total of 2,000 athletes would have been excluded from taking part in the Beijing Olympics.

An as yet unpublished WADA report obtained by Politiken shows that five global sporting associations and 10 countries were allowed to take part, despite the fact that they have not implemented the codex. This means that many athletes were not subjected to the same strict controls as other participating nations.

"It is shameful that the implementation of the WADA codex is going so slowly. The IOC seems to have ignored the fact that so many have not lived up to the codex," says Danish Sporting Association Chairman Niels Nygaard.

Had the IOC followed its own rules, some of the larger disciplines such as handball, volleyball and gymnastics would have been excluded. Similarly, countries such as Russia, Bulgaria and North Korea would not have been allowed to send athletes to Beijing. Overall, the 10 countries concerned received 93 medals at the Beijing Olympics.

"In principle there should be sanctions against those who do not fulfill the WADA codex. According to the IOC Charter they cannot take part in the Olympic Games," says internationally respected anti-doping expert Dag Vidar Hanstad of the Norwegian Sports College.

The International Olympic Committee has declined to comment on the issue, apart from a brief written response from its spokeswoman Emmanuelle Moreau. "All international associations that have not implemented the codex have until May to take the necessary steps, and the IOC is certain that they will succeed," says Moreau.

The IOC, however, knew three months before the Beijing Olympics that the anti-doping rules had been violated. Minutes from a meeting in WADA's organizing committee in May 2008 show that senior IOC members were presented with a previous report. One set of minutes says that the IOC is aware of the problems. Nonetheless there were no consequences for the countries or disciplines concerned.

WADA says that it is the responsibility of the IOC to impose sanctions.

"The IOC was given all the relevant material," says WADA Spokesman Frédéric Donze.

Finn Mikkelsen, head of the secretariat of Anti-Doping Denmark says it is "frustrating" that so many countries and disciplines still have not implemented the WADA codex and are still allowed to take part in the Olympics.

"The IOC has the ability to impose sanctions and bar someone from the Olympics. If they used their powers, it would work," says Mikkelsen.

-- Julian Isherwood

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