More
than 30 Kenyan athletes have been suspended and five more banned since 2012
after testing positive for banned performance-enhancing drugs ©Kirill
Kudryavtsev (AFP)
|
Kenya, under scrutiny
amid allegations of widespread doping in world athletics, on Saturday announced
the immediate establishment of an anti-doping agency. Coming just a day after
the IAAF, world athletics' governing body, banned Russia over
"state-sponsored" doping, the Kenyan government released details of
the new initiative with the aim of assuaging concerns over the east African
country's internal anti-doping policy.
A
damning report by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) last week outlined
evidence of systematic cheating with the consent of the government in Moscow,
noting that drug tests for athletes were conducted at a Russian lab that
totally lacked credibility.
AFP report continues:
Many
in Kenya fear doping is rife among their top class athletes too -- runners who
have been the source of enormous national pride.
More
than 30 Kenyan athletes have been suspended and five more banned since 2012
after testing positive for banned performance-enhancing drugs.
Notable
among that number was marathon star Rita Jeptoo, while there were two positive
tests at this year's Beijing world championships, where the Kenyan team topped
the medals table for the first time since the champs started in 1983, taking
seven golds, six silvers and three bronze medals.
WADA
has continued to raise concerns over Kenya's efforts to put into effect its
anti-doping measures over the past two years, warning that Kenya could face
being ejected from the Olympics unless it showed its seriousness in fighting
doping.
On
Saturday, the Kenyan cabinet said the goal of the new anti-doping agency was to
carry out doping control and promote the integrity of drug-free sports in the
country.
It
would also "oversee the prosecution of anti-doping cases... promote values,
information and preventive work aimed at fighting doping (and) develop and
execute anti-doping rules and regulations". "It will also
"cooperate with the Regional Anti-Doping Organization (RADO), World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and any other anti-doping organization in carrying
out anti-doping activities in Kenya," the cabinet said.
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