WADA to launch independent review into Chinese doping case

The under-fire World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said on Thursday it would launch an independent review over its handling of a case that allowed 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a banned substance to avoid punishment.

Investigation will be led by Swiss prosecutor Eric Cottier

Chinese women's swimmers, wearing white and red zippered tops and pants, pose with their gold medals after setting a world record in the 4x200-metre event at the Tokyo Olympics on July 29, 2021.
Chinese women's swimmers, wearing white and red zippered tops and pants, pose with their gold medals after setting a world record in the 4x200-metre event at the Tokyo Olympics on July 29, 2021. (Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty Images/File)

Heavily criticized for its secretive oversight of positive tests by 23 Chinese swimmers before the Tokyo Olympics, the World Anti-Doping Agency on Thursday appointed a veteran Swiss prosecutor to review how it handled the cases.

The Montreal-based doping watchdog said Eric Cottier will be an independent prosecutor "to conduct a thorough review of WADA's handling of the matter."

Cottier was attorney general of Vaud — the home canton (state) of the International Olympic Committee and swimming's governing body World Aquatics — for 17 years until his retirement in December 2022.

The prosecutor is expected to deliver a report, WADA said, "within two months" — just weeks before the opening of the Paris Olympics where some of the same Chinese swimmers could compete.

Three of the 23 swimmers later won gold medals at the Tokyo Olympics where American and British swimmers took the silver medals. The Games were held in 2021.

It was unclear if Cottier will travel to China to question people involved in the 2021 investigation.

Cottier's report will go to the executive committee of WADA. Its vice president Yang Yang is a two-time Olympic gold medallist in speed skating from China and a former IOC member.

Investigations by the New York Times and German broadcaster ARD published over the weekend detailed how top swimmers from China tested positive for the same banned heart medication in January 2021 at a national meet about seven months before the Tokyo Games.

Chinese state authorities later explained to WADA it found evidence weeks after of contamination, including in spice containers, in the kitchen of a hotel where the swimmers stayed. It is still unclear how traces of the medication trimetazidine (TMZ) got into the kitchen.

WADA accepts explanation

WADA accepted the explanation and the Chinese anti-doping agency rulings that the swimmers were not to blame in 2021 when its own investigators could not travel to China during a lockdown in the COVID-19 pandemic.

The swimmers never served provisional suspensions during the investigation and their positive tests were never made public until the past week.

The Times and ARD revelations have angered athletes, swim federations and anti-doping officials worldwide who suspect favorable treatment for China, which has paid WADA almost $2 million US in extra funding in recent years.

Throughout 2021, China was working closely with the IOC on the challenging preparations to host the Winter Olympics in Beijing in February 2022. They were successfully staged in lockdown conditions.

WADA leaders insisted at a 90-minute news conference Monday they had followed their rules and due process in world sports.

"WADA's integrity and reputation is under attack," its president Witold Ba┼äka, a former 400-metre runner from Poland, said Thursday in a statement.

Banka said WADA was "unfairly accused of bias in favor of China" by not appealing at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne to challenge decisions that cleared the swimmers.

The agency said Cottier "will be granted full and unfettered access to all of WADA's files and documents related to this matter and will be free to consult with any independent experts as he sees fit."

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