A new report from the First Chain German Television (ARD) denounces the survival of a system that encourages doping in Russian athletics, which, according to the authors of the work, makes it difficult for the suspension weighing rises on that country to participate in international competitions.
The report -of which first issued an advance in ARD and then a full version in the regional WDR- shows that in Russia continue working coaches suspended by the International Athletics Federation (IAAF) by its attitude towards doping and there is a permissiveness by local sports authorities to athletes who use banned substances.
The report claims that Vladimir Mokhnev, a coach suspended, currently heads a group of athletes in the city of Gupkin, near the Ukrainian border.
An official of IAAF saw images of Mokhnev leading a group training, to what responded with a letter that describes the fact of serious misconduct.
After the Russian championships indoor track and field results lists even mention officially Mokhnev coaching some athletes, thereby indirectly acknowledges that it has ignored the suspension.
In addition, the report includes advancing a recording in which a trainer, Juri Gordejev offers an informant, identified as an athlete, banned substances.
In another recording An athlete and the head of the anti-doping Russian agency, Julia Anzeliowitsch, agree the time to deliver the sample for a control, which goes against the system includes controls without notice.
Another issue is the death of the former head of the Russian anti-doping agency, Nikita Kamayev, which occurred shortly before, according to the report, wrote a book denouncing the system that it helped create.
“The official diagnosis is heart failure but not everyone believes in a natural death,” says the report.
The report is the continuation of another on systematic doping in Russia that led to an investigation commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
The result of this research led to Russia was suspended and will be prevented from participating in international competitions.
The possibility of lifting the suspension depended largely on Russia made enough reforms to abolish the system that favored doping.
The report concludes that these reforms have not been made yet the authors believe that the IOC is keen that there be no Olympic Games without Russian athletes so fear is permissiveness.
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