Vladimir Putin orders investigation into Russian doping

The Russian president has commented on the damning Wada report for the first time

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his late-night meeting with the heads of Russia’s sports federations in Sochi, Russia. Putin has ordered an investigation into allegations of widespread doping among the country’s sports figures. Photo: Alexei Druzhinin/AP
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his late-night meeting with the heads of Russia’s sports federations in Sochi, Russia. Putin has ordered an investigation into allegations of widespread doping among the country’s sports figures. Photo: Alexei Druzhinin/AP

Russian president Vladimir Putin has ordered an investigation into the World Anti-Doping Agency’s findings that his country’s athletes were involved in a systematic doping programme.

Speaking for the first time since Monday’s publication of Wada’s damning report, which said Russia’s security services were involved in the doping programme, Putin ordered cooperation with the international anti-doping agencies.

In comments reported on the Kremlin’s website, Putin said: “It is necessary to conduct our own internal investigation and to provide the open — I stress — the most open and professional cooperation with the international anti-doping agencies. In Russia we have to do everything to get rid of this problem.

“I agree that this is not only a Russian problem, but if our foreign colleagues have questions, they should be answered, and it must be done in the open. I repeat, there must be professional, diligent work with our colleagues.

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“It is necessary to protect our athletes from the use of illegal drugs. It is necessary for them, our athletes, for their health. And also the sporting contest must be fair.”

Putin was speaking after his sports minister Vitaly Mutko, who was described by Wada commission chairman Dick Pound as being “complicit” in the scandal, had said Britain’s anti-doping system must be worth “zero” if it failed to catch six Russian athletes with previous suspicious test results whom the Wada report said competed in London in 2012.

He told Russia’s Interfax news agency: “If you’re accusing our athletes today, then I’m afraid your system (Britain’s) is zero and worse than ours.”

A Department for Culture, Media and Sport spokesperson responded saying: “We believe Britain’s anti-doping system is robust.”

Mutko described as “absurd” calls by Football Association chairman Greg Dyke for his membership of Fifa’s executive committee to be reviewed in light of the Wada report. He also said he was prepared to put a “foreign specialist” in charge of Russia’s suspended anti-doping laboratory if that is needed.

Russia could still face a ban from next year’s Rio 2016 Olympics although the threat receded on Wednesday when IOC president Thomas Bach admitted the organisation lacked the power to bar the country.

Wada’s independent commission called for Russia to be barred but Bach said the IOC had “no authority” to do impose a ban and said that any such decision must come from the IAAF, athletics’ world governing body.

Sponsorship deal

Meanwhile, Russian bank VTB is to end its sponsorship of international athletics — but has insisted the decision is not connected with the doping scandal.

VTB, the second-largest bank in Russia, has a deal which expires at the end of 2015 and will not be renewing the deal, said athletics’ world governing body the IAAF in a statement.

“VTB has expressed no interest to extend its present contract, the last event of which was the IAAF World Championships in Beijing. The contract will come to a natural end in 2015,” said the IAAF.

VTB first deputy president Vasily Titov told the RIA Novosti news agency: “We did not plan to renew it. This has nothing to do with the doping scandal in any way.”