Monday, January 4, 2010

Concern over 2012 drug searches

London 2012 Olympic Stadium
Work is continuing on the 2012 Olympic Stadium in London

Athletes' representatives have warned that random drugs searches in the Olympic Village at London 2012 would be "utterly disastrous".

British Olympic Association chairman Colin Moynihan has proposed a new bill in the House of Lords to strengthen anti-doping measures.

The bill proposes an increase in the police's search powers and allows them to raid the athletes' village.

But the British Athletes Commission are against random searches.

Chief executive Peter Gardner wants reassurances that 'stop and search' tactics will not be used on Olympic athletes at random and will raise the issue at a meeting with BOA chief executive Andy Hunt on Tuesday.

Gardner said: "If this bill gets through we want to know how exactly would they go about exercising the new powers.

"We do not want to see random 'stop and search' in the Village - that would be utterly disastrous for the London Olympics.

"It's one thing for us to be seen to be taking a tough stance on doping, but it's quite another to make athletes feel like criminals.

"If there is a good reason for a search based on intelligence then fine, but we don't want to see random searches."

Gardner added that he thought it extremely unlikely that anyone would risk taking performance-enhancing drugs into the Village - those that would be using drugs were more likely to do so in privately-rented accommodation.

"There is nothing wrong in having a deterrent but the likelihood of anything being in the Village is almost non-existent," he said.

I think that hosting the next Olympic and Paralympic Games allows us to focus on the whole issue of anti-doping in sport

BOA chairman Lord Colin Moynihan

"So long as we realise that and target our anti-doping efforts in the best places then that is fine."

The 2006 Turin Winter Olympics were overshadowed by raids on the Austrian biathlon and cross-country teams by the Italian police, who had received a tip-off from Games officials and several doping-related products were discovered.

Similar raids have been deployed on the continent and to catch doping Tour de France riders but reasonable grounds would be needed to get a warrant.

Lord Moynihan said: "At the moment, police do not have the ability to search unless it is for prohibited substances, like heroin, and not performance-enhancing drugs.

"This is to extend it to performance-enhancing drugs so that would be all the drugs on the Wada (World Anti-Doping Agency) list."

"It would mean that if someone was blood doping at the Olympic Village in 2012 the police would have the right under law to search the premises under a warrant.

"It is not that uncommon in Games. It has happened at the Winter Olympics. If athletes know that could happen we are going to deter people from cheating and doing themselves harm.

"It is important that it should be on the statute book."

Lord Moynihan is also calling for international cooperation on intelligence gathering to be made a priority.

It could allow the International Olympic Committee and other relevant sporting bodies to access information unearthed by the police.

In addition, any British athlete falling foul of the new Bill, if it becomes law, would suffer the same fate as British sprinter Dwain Chambers.

He is the fastest sprinter in Europe but, having served a two-year ban from 2003 after testing positive for the steroid THG, is banned for life from competing at the Olympics by the BOA.

Lord Moynihan is aiming for the Bill to become law by July 2011 and will probably introduce it in February.

The pending general election will see its progress halted but Lord Moynihan intends to reintroduce it in the next Parliament.

He added: "I think that hosting the next Olympic and Paralympic Games allows us to focus on the whole issue of anti-doping in sport, perhaps more so than has been done before.

"I do not believe the Bill will be contentious but the debates around it will be non-partisan, first rate and interesting."

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