Olivier
Niggli, Chief Operating Officer and General Counsel of the World Anti-Doping
Agency speaks on June 20, 2016 ©Adrian Dennis (AFP)
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The World Anti-Doping
Agency on Tuesday slammed Russian hackers who breached its database and
published confidential records of US Olympic gymnast Simone Biles and tennis
stars Venus and Serena Williams.
AFP
report continues:
WADA
said in a statement that the Russian cyber-espionage group Tsar Team (APT28),
also known as Fancy Bears, had broken into its Anti-Doping Administration and
Management System (ADAMS) database.
The
hacking group released information gleaned from the files of Biles, the
Williams sisters and US women's basketball player Elena Delle Donne.
In
a posting on its website, Fancy Bears claimed US athletes at the Olympics had
"played well but not fair."
However,
none of the documents published by the group provided evidence of wrongdoing on
the part of the athletes involved.
Instead,
the disclosed files set out instances where the athletes had been granted
exemptions to use various medications for legitimate reasons -- a common
practice in the sports world.
US
gymnast Simone Biles competes in the women's floor event final of the Artistic
Gymnastics at the Olympic Arena during the Rio 2016 Olympic Games ©Toshifumi
Kitamura (AFP)
|
The
United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) characterized the hack as a
"cowardly and despicable" attempt to smear the four women.
"In
each of the situations, the athlete has done everything right in adhering to
the global rules for obtaining permission to use a needed medication,"
USADA chief executive Travis Tygart said.
"The
cyber-bullying of innocent athletes being engaged by these hackers is cowardly
and despicable," added Tygart, the anti-doping czar who famously helped
expose US cyclist and dope cheat Lance Armstrong.
- 'I believe in clean
sport' -
Biles
said on Twitter she had taken medications for attention deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) since childhood.
"Please
know I believe in clean sport, have always followed the rules and will continue
to do so as fair play is critical to sport and is very important to me,"
said Biles, one of the stars of the Rio Olympics after winning four gold
medals.
Venus
Williams meanwhile expressed "disappointment" at the breach, stating:
"I am one of the strongest supporters of maintaining the highest level of
integrity in competitive sport."
Delle
Donne laughed off the revelations in an upbeat post on Twitter.
"I'd
like to thank the hackers for making the world aware that I legally take a
prescription for a condition that I've been diagnosed with, which WADA granted
me an exemption for. Thanks guys!" the basketball player wrote.
Russian
whistleblower Yuliya Stepanova is living in hiding in the United States after
lifting the lid on doping in Russian sport ©Vincent Jannink (ANP/AFP)
|
An
International Olympic Committee (IOC) spokeswoman said the leaked information
was "clearly aimed at tarnishing the reputation of clean athletes"
while reiterating that no anti-doping violation had occurred.
The
data breach comes just weeks after hackers gained access to WADA's file on
Russian doping whistleblower Yulia Stepanova.
Stepanova,
who is living in hiding in the United States, later said she feared for her
life following the hack.
"WADA
deeply regrets this situation and is very conscious of the threat that it
represents to athletes whose confidential information has been divulged through
this criminal act," WADA director general Olivier Niggli said in a
statement.
"WADA
condemns these ongoing cyber-attacks that are being carried out in an attempt
to undermine WADA and the global anti-doping system," Niggli added.
WADA
said it believed the latest breach had occurred after "spear
phishing" of email accounts and that it had been confined to ADAMS accounts
of athletes competing in Rio.
Spear
phishing is when an email user receives a message purportedly from someone they
know, but it is actually from a hacker.
- 'Criminal acts' -
The
hacking comes after a series of WADA investigations which have alleged a vast
state-sponsored doping program in Russian sport dating back several years.
Russia's
track and field athletes were banned from the Rio Olympics by the International
Association of Athletics Federations, angering the Kremlin, which condemned the
move as politically motivated.
But
an independent report commissioned by WADA and published in July by Canadian
law professor Richard McLaren concluded that Russia had run an elaborate scheme
to evade drug-testers at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, corroborating
claims by the former head of Russia's anti-doping laboratory.
WADA
director Niggli said the hacking of the agency would hamper Russian efforts to
reintegrate into the sports world.
"These
criminal acts are greatly compromizing the effort by the global anti-doping
community to re-establish trust in Russia further to the outcomes of the
Agency's independent McLaren Investigation Report," Niggli continued.
Fancy
Bears however indicated it planned to release more information.
"This
is just the tip of the iceberg," the group said on its website.
"Wait for sensational
proof of famous athletes taking doping substances any time soon."
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