The World Anti-Doping Agency’s incoming director general yesterday called for more money in the fight against sports cheats and revealed its investigation into what has been called a Russian state-sponsored doping programme cost $1.5mn.
Olivier Niggli, who takes up his position on July 1, told a conference in Doha that the battle against doping is being hampered by a lack of funding.
“Certainly, it’s a challenge for the future to make sure that the anti-doping community globally is funded properly,” Niggli told delegates at the ‘Anti-Doping in Humans and Animals’ conference in the Qatari capital.
“We are being asked to do more investigations... that needs to be funded one way or another. You cannot ask that to be funded with the same budget that we had 10 years ago.”
Niggli added that it cost the organisation “$1.5mn for the first investigation” into Russia’s doping programmes.
That figure equates to around five per cent of WADA’s annual $30mn (26.9mn euros; £20.5mn) budget.
That investigation found evidence of state-sponsored doping in Russia and led to the country’s athletes being banned from competing internationally.
WADA is also now investigating allegations by the former head of Russia’s anti-doping laboratory, Grigory Rodchenkov, that secret service and government officials subverted samples at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics to hide failed tests by home country athletes.
A final decision on lifting the ban and whether or not to allow Russian athletes to participate at the Rio Olympics will be taken by world athletics governing body the IAAF on June 17.
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