WADA looks to governments to help fight drugs

When the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) was launched 10  years ago on Nov. 10, the sporting landscape was being bombarded  by doping scandals with few weapons available to combat  increasingly brazen drug cheats.

As WADA prepares to move into a second decade spearheading  the fight against drugs in sport, the agency has compiled an  impressive list of victories and built a formidable arsenal  capable of attacking cheats from every angle.

“I guess it depends how you define a win,” Dick Pound, WADA  chief from 1999 to 2007, told Reuters. “There will always be  cheaters.

“But the gap which maybe used to be a year or two years is  now down to maybe something in the weeks. Our science is as good  as theirs.

“I think you can say you’ve won the fight against doping in  sport if you’ve persuaded 99.9 percent of the people not to do  it because it’s the wrong thing to do, it’s dangerous or that  they’re going to get caught.

“Then you can say to that 99.9 percent that those who cheat  we will catch them.

“We have the will and we have the means to catch them and  we’ll have sanctions that will take them out of your hair once  we do catch them. It is winnable if everybody stays focused on  it.”

An anti-doping code accepted by more than 630 sports  organisations and the UNESCO convention against doping in sport  ratified by more than 125 of 193 member states have left drug  cheats few places to hide.

Tough sanctions, sophisticated testing, research and  educational projects and testers armed with a whereabouts rule  allowing them to check athletes anywhere at anytime have put  cheats on the defensive.

GOVERNMENT HELP

Over the next 10 years it will be governments and law  enforcement agencies applying the pressure as the focus shifts  from catching the dopers to those who supply the drugs.

IOC president Jacques Rogge has acknowledged that sports  organisations cannot fight alone and will need help from  governments to investigate and dismantle doping operations.

While Pound had a reputation for no-nonsense tough talking,  John Fahey, the man who replaced him at the agency’s helm in  2008, has brought diplomacy to the fight.

Using considerable political skills sharpened by years of  service in the Australian parliament, Fahey has taken a more  low-key approach to the job of building powerful alliances with  governments and law enforcement agencies.

“As we look at the future shape of all of this, yes we have  to do tests, blood tests and urine analysis and you’re going to  catch people,” said Pound. “But the real breakthrough is going  to be through the investigative powers of the governments who  get at the supply chain and find out where it’s coming from and  where it’s going.

“Now that you’ve got possession of doping substances as a  doping violation you can follow a shipment of steroids into the  hands of an athlete.

“We don’t have to find you positive. You are in possession  of these substances, you are either using or trafficking but  you’re not making a sculpture at home just to look at them.

“The sanctions are now much tougher than they used to be and  therefore it’s worth devoting police-type resources to it.

“In the old days, they would say why should we spend three  years doing an investigation like BALCO and they get off with a  suspended sentence or fine? It’s not worth it.

“But if you’re getting some serious jail time there is an  incentive for the investigative authorities to focus on these  things.”

BALCO SCANDAL

The impact governments can have on the anti-doping effort  was demonstrated in the United States where a federal  investigation into the Bay Area Laboratory Cooperative (BALCO)  near San Francisco unearthed one of the sporting world’s biggest  doping scandals, linking top names in athletics, baseball and  American football to performance-enhancing drugs.

The U.S. Congress was also able to accomplish something WADA  never could: force Major League Baseball to address its woeful  doping record and come up with tougher testing and sanctions.

“The societal problem of the manufacturing and trafficking  of these drugs is certainly becoming a higher priority,” said  Travis Tygart, CEO of the United States Anti-Doping Agency  (USADA).

“Over the next 10 years you will see a more concerted  worldwide effort to stop the supply, manufacturing and  trafficking and that takes active government and law enforcement  involvement.”

In 2008, WADA signed a memorandum of understanding with  Interpol and intensified its cooperation with the pharmaceutical  industry.

Such partnerships will grow and strengthen over the next  decade as WADA attempts to deal with the forces that tempt  athletes to cheat.

“There will still be avenues in sport through the  temptations for money that will have to be addressed, whether  it’s doping, whether its bribery or corruption,” said WADA  director general David Howman. “I don’t think you’re going to  find the stains of evil mopped up by some towel waved by WADA. “We are even now confronting the introduction of some of  these other evils including bribery and corruption. Sport will  have to address that in serious fashion.

“I don’t know whether sport will want to take that on or  whether they will leave that to governments.

“But I’m sure if you and I talk in 2020 it will be on top of  the things you will want to talk to me about.”