IOC President Thomas Bach encourages all stakeholders in the fight against doping

The athletes at the heart of IF Forum 2019
November 3, 2019
Exhibition on the logo of the Mediterranean Games
November 6, 2019

Addressing the 1,500 delegates attending the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)’s Fifth World Conference on Doping in Sport in Katowice, Poland, the President announced a commitment of USD 10 million by the IOC to support a four-point action plan aimed at strengthening the fight against doping:

– Storage of pre-Games testing samples for 10 years

President Bach introduced a global long-term storage and re-analysis programme extended to samples collected during the pre-Games testing period. “To make this step possible, the IOC is ready to finance the necessary storage facilities for the International Federations and National Anti-Doping Organisations for the tens of thousands of samples collected during the pre-Games testing period,” he said.

“Based on our experience with the storage, this represents a commitment by the IOC of about USD 5 million,” he added.

– New genetic sequencing anti-doping test – collecting samples already at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020

To take advantage of the most extensive pre-Games testing programme ever, which will “maximise both detection and deterrence”, the IOC President asked the International Testing Agency (ITA), which is coordinating this effort, “to collect the appropriate samples to be analysed by the new genetic sequencing method as early as the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, regardless of whether this testing method is already fully validated or not”.

“In the latter case, the IOC would analyse these samples after the full validation of this new testing method,” he added.

– More money for further scientific research

Building on the success of the last research programme, supported by the IOC’s USD 10 million fund to develop innovative anti-doping testing and detection methods, President Bach announced “an additional commitment of USD 2.5 million to bring some of these projects to fruition”.

“If the governments would like to match this amount, we would be pleased to transfer these USD 2.5 million from the budget of the IOC Medical and Scientific Commission to the WADA research budget,” he said.

– Strengthening the investigative powers of WADA

Praising the “great progress of WADA’s Intelligence and Investigative Unit since its creation in 2016”, the President also recalled that “the challenges of doping have unfortunately become more complex”.

“In view of this,” he said, “the Olympic and sports movement and the government authorities should discuss how to strengthen the WADA Intelligence and Investigative Unit.”

“We invite the governments to a discussion on how we can do so. For such a joint programme, the IOC would then commit another USD 2.5 million for the next Olympiad,” he continued.

In addition to this new plan, the IOC President insisted on the need for better cooperation with governments when it comes to identifying and sanctioning those in the athletes’ entourage involved in doping cases.