© Andrey Anosov / SBR / SputnikMatvey Yeliseyev (Russia) during the men's relay race at the 2016โ17 Biathlon World Cup 5 in Ruhpolding, Germany.
Twenty-two Russian biathletes who had been suspected of doping following the publication of the second part of the WADA Independent Commission report, have been cleared of any suspicion by the International Biathlon Union (IBU).The IBU launched its own investigation in cooperation with the Russian Biathlon Union (RBU), after it received a list from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) with the names of 31 Russian biathletes, mentioned in the WADA Independent Commission report.
The IBU executive committee held an extraordinary meeting on Saturday to discuss the results of the investigation against the Russian athletes.
"As a result of the first meeting on December 22, 2016, two athletes were suspended. [The IBU] also launched investigation against the rest 29 [biathletes] together with the RBU," the head of the IBU, Anders Bessebrg, said, adding that "now, seven athletes remain under investigation while the rest 22 have no problems," as
quoted by the sports news portal ะกhampionat.com.
Meanwhile, the head of the RBU, Aleksandr Kravtsov, told Russian R-Sport news that the IBU did not impose any new sanctions on the Russian athletes after conducting its own investigation into the issue.
"No one has been suspended ... so far. The team will continue to compete," he told R-Sport, adding that the two bodies would continue their cooperation within the investigation.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister and the former Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko called the IBU decision a "balanced" one.
"There are no doping programs in Russia. There are people, who dope and cheat and these people will always be punished," he added, as cited by TASS.
"Everything falls into its place as soon as one steps aside from politics and relies solely on legal norms," Mutko stressed.
Earlier, the Norwegian star Ole Einar Bjorndalen, 42, an eight-time Olympic champion, threw his weight behind Russian biathletes by saying that sportsmen and women are innocent until proven guilty.
"As long as they are not disqualified, for me they are all clean," the biathlete, often referred to as 'The King of Biathlon,' told sport.de.
In December, WADA Independent Commission chair, professor, Richard McLaren, delivered the second part of its report, which claimed that over 1,000 Russian athletes competing in the summer, winter and paralympic games could have been involved in a manipulation system to conceal positive doping tests.
Following its publication, the FIS suspended six Russian skiers. Four Russian skeleton athletes were also provisionally suspended from competing by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF).
The suspension was lifted on January 8 as the federation found no sufficient evidence for the ban.Christof Wieschemann, the lawyer who defended Russian skiers, told RT the documents referring to individual athletes, which were used as a basis for the WADA report, contained a significant number of inconsistencies and flaws.
His views have been echoed by Ellis Cashmore, Professor of sociology at Aston University.
"Although Mclaren's report were full of accusations they didn't find the evidence credible enough to continue with the suspension of the Russian athletes," Cashmore said in an interview with RT. He noted that while the sports community has "accepted" the report when it was published, there are some question marks regarding McLaren's accusations.
"So doubts are certainly being cast on the, I won't say, the credibility of the entire report, but certainly on McLaren's accusations that have not been backed up by proof," Cashmore said. "And McLaren for some reason, which escapes most people, has not supplied that corroborating evidence."
The main criticism of the report - which makes some question its credibility -
is the excessive reliance on testimony of a single person, Grigory Rodchenkov, who basically "defected" and has "an axe to grind," Cashmore believes. If the other sports federations will follow the trend it would be "hugely embarrassing" to WADA and "hugely embarrassing to the world of sport."
"The only reason that prevents me from saying that there will be a domino effect here, is that there are certain sports organizations, governing organizations,
international governing organizations that are so heavily invested in the McLaren report that it would be just almost unbelievable if they change their mind now," Cashmore told RT.
"I'm thinking particularly of the governing organization of track and field that is the IAAF, they have already banned Russian athletes track and field from last year's Olympic games. And I think a U-turn on their behalf would be incredible."
Comment: No matter what truth eventually comes out, the 'State Sponsored Doping' meme has served its purpose. Now in the mind of the average Westerner, the unconscious image that comes to mind about Russian sports must be one of beastly athletes locked in dark cages, as a sniggering Vladimir Putin injects them with a vial of radioactive super liquid. But as always, it is being revealed to be more BS from the Fake News consortium that is mainstream media.