News
Denmark keen to strengthen international doping co-op
This article is more than 7 years old.
The culture minister, Mette Bock, wants more uniform sanctions and a stronger WADA
The culture minister, Mette Bock, has announced she intends to assist in strengthening the international anti-doping agency WADA in its battle against nations and sporting organisations that don’t adhere to international anti-doping rules.
Spurred on by the recent doping scandal in Russia, Bock wants to give WADA more opportunity to sanction those who break international anti-doping legislation.
“Doping ruins athletics and the opportunity to compete on equal terms across nations in all sports,” said Bock.
“We are talking about cheating here – so there is a need for us to establish a joint front and cracking down hard on doping abuse.”
READ MORE: Wilson Kipketer could lose world records to contentious EAA proposal
Sanctioning change
The Danish Athletics Association and Anti Doping Denmark have praised the government’s initiative, contending that the Russian scandal uncovered a need to tighten up the international anti-doping rules.
They maintain that the international rules, as they are today, do not account for international and national sports organisations, along with anti-doping organisations, breaking the rules.
The five specific proposals that Bock wants to implement are sanctions being uniform, more tools being made available for the sanction system, a stronger WADA, the power to ban entire nations, and recovery through troubleshooting.