BBC Sport |
More than 1,900 athletes
were sanctioned for doping in 2015, new World Anti-Doping Agency figures show.
BBC Sport |
BBC
Africa Sport report continues:
The
1,929 punishments for failed drug tests were an increase of 14% on the previous
year, when 1,693 doping offences were carried out.
WADA
says increased focus on investigations, intelligence gathering and
whistleblowing are behind the rise.
South
Africa had the sixth highest number of violations, with 59, the most of any
African country.
World Anti-Doping
Agency Figures Show 14% Rise In Doping Sanctions
Anti-doping
bodies collected more than 300,000 samples in 2015
|
The
1,929 punishments for failed drug tests were an increase of 14% on the previous
year, when 1,693 doping offences were carried out.
Wada
says increased focus on investigations, intelligence gathering and
whistleblowing are behind the rise.
"Recent
events have shown investigative work is becoming ever more important,"
said Wada president Sir Craig Reedie.
However,
he added that "testing remains vital to detecting doping".
Last
year's McLaren report, which
found more than 1,000 Russians benefited from a state-sponsored doping
programme between 2011 and 2015, was commissioned by Wada following evidence
from whistleblowers.
The
report led to Russians being banned from international athletics competition as
well as last summer's Paralympic Games in Rio.
Meanwhile,
the International Olympic Committee is retesting hundreds of doping samples
from the 2008 and 2012 Olympic Games based on targeted intelligence. More than
100 athletes have already been sanctioned as part of the retesting programme.
The
latest Wada figures, though, are based on 2015 data. Its 2015 Anti-Doping Rule Violations Report shows there were 2,522
"adverse analytical findings" from 229,412 samples, of which 1,929
led to action against athletes.
The
number of samples taken was 5% up on the 217,762 taken in 2014.
The
figures do not include more than 70,000 tests and 1,200 failed tests which were
not processed through Wada's anti-doping administration system (Adams). Many
professional sports in North America do not use the Adams system.
The figures also show Russian athletes had the most anti-doping rule violations in 2015, with 176. The sport with the most sanctions was bodybuilding, with 270.
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