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Oud 27 februari 2015, 15:44   #12
parcifal
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Ja. Goed plan. Sporters weigeren.

Heel stoer ook.
Sporters? Dopingkonijnen ja.
Ze zitten er toch allemaal in tot en met de kopstukken van Rusada zelf, en de minister van sport.

Nooit die ARD documentaire gezien daarover? Hallucinant voor wie denkt dat er een zuivere russische sportman bestaat.

Citaat:
Doping: 99% of Russian athletes guilty, German TV alleges.

As many as 99% of Russian athletes are guilty of doping, a German TV documentary has alleged.
The programme claims that Russian officials systematically accepted payment from athletes to supply banned substances and cover up tests.
The documentary, shown by Das Erste, also implicates the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) in covering up the abuse.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) has pledged to "fully investigate".
The BBC has not independently verified any of the allegations in the documentary and is awaiting responses from the athletes about whom the allegations have been made.
In the programme, broadcast on Wednesday, former Russia discus thrower Evgenia Pecherina claimed that "most, the majority, 99%" of Russian athletes use banned substances.
She added: "You can get absolutely everything. Everything the athlete wants."
Liliya Shobukhova, who won London Marathon in 2010, is also interviewed in the programme and admits paying the Russian Athletics Federation 450,000 euros (£350,000) to cover up a positive doping test.
She is currently serving a two-year ban after irregularities were detected in her biological passport.
The documentary also included an undercover video purporting to show 800m runner Mariya Savinova, who won gold at the 2012 Olympics in London, admitting to using the banned steroid oxandrolone.
The video was dubbed into German with the original audio track absent, but the channel said it possessed an unedited version.
The claims stem principally from former Russian Anti-Doping Agency (Rusada) official Vitaly Stepanov and his wife Yulia (nee Rusanova), formerly an 800m runner who was banned for doping.
They allege that leading Russian athletics officials supplied banned substances in exchange for 5% of an athlete's earnings and colluded with doping control officers to hush up and falsify tests.
Yulia Stepanova says it was also common for Russian athletes to avoid out-of-competition testing by using false names during foreign training camps.
Wada said on its website the claims would be "carefully scrutinised", adding that it had "already received some information and evidence of the type exposed in the documentary".
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