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CAS to rule on Russian athletes’ Olympic ban

By our correspondents
July 05, 2016

MOSCOW: The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) will step in to settle the dispute between Russia, its athletes and the governing body of world athletics over their participation in the Rio Olympic Games, CAS said on Monday.

The Russian Olympic Committee (ROC), the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) and 68 Russian athletes have agreed an expedited procedure which should conclude on July 21 “with the issuance of the final decision”, CAS said in a statement.

The athletes are opposing the IAAF’s ban of all Russian track and field athletes following a report showing widespread, state-sponsored doping that rocked the world of sport.

The athletes say they are being punished despite not failing drugs tests and that they should be eligible to compete at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

The Games start on August 5 with the IAAF having said only a handful of Russian athletes, who meet a number of criteria including being repeatedly tested outside Russia, would be allowed to compete there.

The ban was first put in place last November and confirmed last month, when the IAAF said that there were still considerable problems with anti-doping in Russia.

Olympic pole vault champion Yelena Isinbayeva described the ban as a breach of human rights and threatened legal action.

Russian hammer throw champion Sergej Litvinov received widespread sympathy after he published a moving, open letter to IAAF president Sebastian Coe accepting that Russia had a problem but pleading the case for clean individuals. “I am angry because I have dedicated a majority of my life to the hammer throw and I have done it clean. Despite immense pressure to break the rules, I decided to sacrifice results and now I am punished for it,” Litvinov wrote last month.

Should CAS rule in favour of the athletes, there would then be a further issue to resolve as the IOC’s current deadline for athletes to achieve the qualification criteria - July 11 - would have passed.