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Russia says up to 270 athletes cleared for Rio
The Russian team were banned last week after the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) said “the integrity of weightlifting has been seriously damaged on multiple times and levels by the Russians”.
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“Not one team underwent such strict requirements as Russian athletes”, he told a news conference in Rio.
“It saddens me to say this, but at times WADA has seemed to be more interested in publicity and self-promotion rather than doing its job as a regulator”, Werthein said.
Last month World Sailing said Sozykin had been denied eligibility for the Rio games because of the findings of the McLaren report commissioned by the World Anti-doping Agency.
At least 117 competitors on a 387 Russian Olympic Committee entry list have been excluded but CAS and then a three-man IOC panel must decide over the coming 24-48 hours whether to stick to a temporary rule that blocks out Russians who have previously served doping suspensions.
“It is not the IOC which can be held responsible for all alleged corruption between the leadership of an worldwide federation and a national member federation to cover up doing”, said Bach.
“It’s not the reputation of the International Olympic Committee but that of WADA that has to be restored”, he said.
Russia has been at the centre of an Olympic controversy since a World Anti-Doping Agency investigation accused the Russian government of staging widespread doping.
Gathering in advance of the 2016 Summer Games, members of the International Olympic Committee confirmed their support Tuesday for the decision not to bar Russian Federation from the upcoming competition.
“It is vital that Russian Federation has admitted that the two commission reports are true and they have specific problem”, he said.
Meanwhile, Bach declared Rio “ready” to host the Games and said problems with shoddy construction work at the Olympic Village had been resolved.
But the two cases involving the three Russian rowers banned by the World Rowing Federation for either being named by McLaren’s report or having a previous doping conviction have taken place today, and a decision is expected later.
Gilady was referring to Russian middle-distance runner Yulia Stepanova, who had written to WADA repeatedly offering evidence of state-backed doping but ended up providing the information to a German broadcaster, which produced several documentaries revealing the scandal.
Bach has said the International Olympic Committee is not responsible as it did not decide the release of the McLaren report nor control the anti-doping laboratories that Russian authorities have been accused of manipulating.
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“While it is destabilising in the lead-up to the Games, it is obvious, given the seriousness of the revelations that McLaren uncovered, that they had to be published and acted upon without delay”, WADA president Craig Reedie said.