6 Dec 2017

IOC ramps up drug testing

5:56 am on 6 December 2017

More than 20,000 doping tests will have been conducted by the start of next year's Pyeongchang winter Olympics as the International Olympic Committee's pre-Games testing programme hopes to root out cheats in advance.

There are allegations four Russian who were winners of gold medals at the Sochi Winter Olympics were doping.

. Photo: IOC

Russian athletes are among those targeted most with the nation awaiting the IOC decision on its participation at February's Pyeongchang winter Olympics following the widespread doping scandal in the country.

"It is 7,000 (total) tests so far until November on 4,000 athletes," IOC medical chief Richard Budgett told reporters.

"There will be a lot more in the coming two or three months as we are in the winter season. I suspect the total number of tests will be 20,000."

The targeted pre-Games testing task force, jointly run by WADA, the IOC and winter and summer sports federations, advises federations and National Olympic committees to test specific athletes.

"The Russian athletes have been tested more than other by a considerable margin," Budgett said. "Requirements have been issued to the international federations and RUSADA (Russian anti-doping agency) for the level of testing of those athletes."

Russia has been in the spotlight since a report by a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) commission in 2015 found evidence of state-sponsored doping in Russia and accused it of systematically violating anti-doping regulations.

A further WADA report in 2016 found that more than 1,000 Russian competitors in more than 30 sports had been involved in a conspiracy to conceal positive drug tests over a five-year period.

In the last month, the IOC's own commission has banned more than 20 Russian athletes from the Olympics for life over doping violations at the 2014 Winter Games that Russia hosted in Sochi. WADA has said that Russia remains "non-compliant" with its code.

The IOC will decide if Russia will be allowed to compete at the Pyeongchang Games in South Korea from Feb. 9-25.

Meanwhile Mexico's suspended anti-doping laboratory has been reinstated after correcting non-conformities, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said.

The Laboratorio Nacional de Prevencion y Control del Dopaje had its accreditation revoked on Nov. 23 and was prohibited from carrying out any anti-doping activities after failing to comply with international standards.

WADA said it was satisfied the Mexico lab had addressed the issues and could resume testing immediately.

"We would like to commend the Laboratory for the cooperation and hard work that led to this reinstatement," WADA director general Olivier Niggli said in a statement.

"We are confident that the laboratory has corrected its deficiencies and our Laboratory Expert Group will now continue to monitor the laboratory's performance to ensure that it operates to the high standards required by WADA.

-Reuters