WADA
President John Fahey has called on athletes who are doping to withdraw from
their national teams and stay away from the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
With
less than three weeks to the opening ceremony of London 2012, Mr. Fahey has
taken the opportunity to highlight the rights of all clean athletes to compete
on a level playing field and to gain due reward for their hard work and natural
talent.
“I
say this in the clearest way possible: if you are a doping athlete and you are
planning to compete in London then you must withdraw from your Olympic team,”
said Mr. Fahey. “Doping is cheating, plain and simple.
And if you compete in London as a doped athlete then not only will you be
cheating your fellow athletes, you will be cheating sports fans across the
world, doing a disservice to your national flag and flouting the ideals of the
Olympic Movement.
“A
doping athlete cannot achieve success, it is a complete contradiction. Even if
a doping athlete were to win a medal he or she would never be able to look at
themselves in the mirror and say ‘well done, I deserved this’. “The Olympic
Games is the absolute pinnacle for many athletes and for them to train
endlessly over a four-year period and then have their efforts belittled by a
doping athlete, to me that is complete and utter betrayal of what sport stands
for.”
Mr.
Fahey also applauded the efforts of the world’s anti-doping community in trying
to identify doping athletes ahead of the Games, as well as the International
Olympic Committee and Games organizers LOCOG for preparing a comprehensive
anti-doping program.
“These
will be the most tested Games in Olympic history and doping athletes must know
that they will be under the severe scrutiny of anti-doping officials from the
moment they set foot in the Olympic Village,” added Mr. Fahey.
“The
IOC and LOCOG have prepared an extensive anti-doping program that will analyse
up to 6,250 samples while the anti-doping authorities are already sharing
intelligence to assist with target testing of athletes under suspicion.
“I
should also add that UK Anti-Doping is mandated to test athletes in training
camps ahead of the Games and has also compiled much intelligence with the
co-operation of anti-doping organizations worldwide”. “There has been a
coherent effort to make London 2012 as ‘clean’ as possible and doping athletes
should know that their chances of avoiding detection are the smallest they have
ever been.”
Despite
the work of the world’s anti-doping community, Mr. Fahey stressed that ultimate
responsibility lay with athletes as to how free of doping London 2012 will be“Athletes
are responsible for what they put into their bodies and athletes are
responsible for whether or not they choose to dope,” added Mr. Fahey.
“The
world’s ant-doping community can only do so much. If every athlete decides not
to dope then we will have completely dope-free Games that are the simple
reality. “It is up to the athletes and I urge
them to collectively take more responsibility for the sake of clean
competition.”
Mr.
Fahey will be available for further comment at WADA’s pre-Olympic press conference in
the Olympic Park at 14:00 on July 25.
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