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WADA alarmed by extent of Sunday Times allegations over athletics doping crisis

ByReuters

Updated 02/08/2015 at 08:02 GMT

The World Anti-Doping Agency on Sunday said it was alarmed by the size and extent of "wild" doping allegations after IAAF test data leaked to news organisations showed hundreds of suspect samples from athletes, including Olympic and world championship medallists.

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When analysed by scientists, the tests showed more than 800 athletes had given blood samples that were "highly suggestive" of doping or "abnormal", reported the BBC, who added they had also seen the documents.
"These are wild allegations, wide allegations and we will check them out and have that done with the commission as quickly as possible," WADA chief Craig Reedie told reporters in Kuala Lumpur.
An independent commission is already investigating previous allegations of mass doping.
"I am very surprised by the numbers from the leak from the IAAF I am sure they will want to look at it closely to determine the source," Reedie said. "It was the spread of the allegations that came from previous programmes (that surprised me). If you look at allegations on blood issues... they are even wider. So that's a concern. But I stress athletes are innocent until proven guilty."
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The IAAF logo

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Although abnormal blood tests are not in themselves proof of doping, the release of the data will be an embarrassment to the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) less than a month before its world championships in Beijing.
"There will be zero tolerance, this is clear," IAAF Vice President Sergey Bubka told reporters after meeting with WADA's Reedie and IAAF President Lamine Diack, who is stepping down later this month. "The IAAF is translating the script as it is important to clearly understand the specific allegations.
"We will not go into details now but IAAF is a very strong leader in the fight against doping. We will not stop the fight. If we need to change rules and regulations we will do it."
Bubka, who is bidding to succeed Diack on August 19 in Beijing with Briton Sebastian Coe the only other candidate, said the international federation would issue a statement later commenting on the specific allegations.
The IAAF introduced biological passports for athletics as part of its drug testing regime in 2009, which help in the detection of abnormal fluctuations in red blood cell counts. Athletes, most notoriously in cycling, have used blood transfusions and the stimulating agent Erythropoietin (EPO) to increase their red blood cell count, which can help improve performance in endurance events.
The BBC report said a third of medals in endurance events at the Olympics and world championships between 2001 and 2012 were won by athletes who have recorded "suspicious tests".
Cheating by the use of banned substances has long been a scourge of athletics, from the systematic doping in the former East Germany, through Ben Johnson's disqualification from the 1988 Olympics to the BALCO scandal in the United States.
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