Skating chief keeps mum on Russian participation in Pyeongchang: Yonhap

By Park Sae-jin Posted : February 12, 2017, 18:27 Updated : February 12, 2017, 18:27

Medalists at at the ISU Speed Skating Championships at Gangneung.[Yonhap News Photo]



The top international skating official on Sunday kept mum on Russia's participation in the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics, with the country still under investigation for state-sponsored doping.

Jan Dijkema, president of the International Skating Union (ISU), said the decision will be up to the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which has set up two commissions to investigate Russian doping. It was in response to a World Anti-Doping Agency-commissioned report last December by investigator Richard McLaren, accusing Russia of a widespread doping cover-up at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games.

Last month, US Figure Skating President Sam Auxier said Russia shouldn't be allowed to compete at the Pyeongchang Olympics. The ISU itself relocated the final ISU World Cup Speed Skating of the current season from Russia's Chelyabinsk to Stavanger, Norway. The IOC has recommended winter sports federations that they halt preparations for major events in Russia.

Dijkema, on the other hand, took a wait-and-see approach on the doping scandal.

"We have the IOC investigation at this moment and we're waiting for the results," Dijkema told South Korean reporters on the final day of the ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships at Gangneung Oval in Gangneung, Gangwon Province.

"If the skaters are involved (in doping), then of course, the ISU is involved; but not regarding the participation itself of the Games," Dijkema added. "The decision is up to the IOC."

No Russian skaters have been suspended for doping, but Russian athletes in other sports have been sanctioned. When McLaren's report was released, the ISU issued a statement saying, "If and when there are sufficient elements and evidence to pursue anti-doping rule violations, the ISU will not hesitate to open disciplinary proceedings against bodies or persons subject to infringements of the World/ISU Anti-Doping Code."

And when he was elected ISU president last June, Dijkema had said, "there is no doubt in anti-doping and match-fixing that the ISU will have a really firm policy."

(Yonhap)
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