Yes; you are being watched, so do the right thing, which is the honest thing.
I
|
am not surprised that the
IAAF has uphold its ban on Russian athletes taking part in the Rio Olympics,
and, quite frankly, nobody, probably excluding the most arrogant of Russians,
should have been surprised by the IAAF's action.
I
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rrespective of what the reality is, the overwhelming perception is
that there is massive corruption in professional and non-professional sports
all over the world, and that some governments and national sports bodies are
involved.
S
|
ports is extremely big business, so there are big incentives for
corrupt sports men and women, the business people who support them. Some
officials in some governments are dishonestly giving some of these sports
people the added edge, through illegal and corrupt practices. The perception is
that Russia is one of the countries which is involved in doing so, and it would
appear that the problem is so big, that one wonder whether the Russians are
feeling that they cannot clean up corruption in their sports arena, or that
they only have to do the absolute minimum to give the perception that they are
committed to effectively cleaning up their sports?
I
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n order to make any head way, Russia needs to unambiguously accept
that she has a problem with dishonesty and corruption in her sports domain -
yes, like many other countries - and take responsibility to remedy it. No
equivocations about the generality of the problem, internationally.
I
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t is clear that some Russians are taking action to try to put
their house in order, but, I suspect that this is proving difficult, as the
corrupt people who are involved, fight tooth and nails to hold on to their
illegal money making scams. The problem, of course, is probably endemic, with
people from probably all echelon of society being involved.
A
|
s I have said, it is not only Russia which is in the dog-house
over cheating in sports; we have seen such accusations and evidence of sports
people in North America, Africa and Europe, falling to the irresistible
temptation of making big money from cheating. Probably the big difference
is that, in the case of Russia, it appears to have been more systematic and
done on a larger scale, and Russia has a prestigious reputation to
protect.
T
|
he Russian government ought to have been aware of what was
happening and take effective action to address this appalling situation. The
fact that it had initially sought to deny the problem, and then prove itself
unable to take robust action to make her sports honest, which the IAAF has
asked for, raises serious questions about Russia's commitment to deliver on her
promises.
T
|
he Russian state has benefited from the national and international
prestige which comes with her sports men and women doing well in international
sporting events. The argument that it would be wrong to 'punish' honest Russian
sports men and women, by banning Russia from participating in relevant events
until she has cleaned up her act, is fallacious, since the athletes are not
competing as individuals, but as representatives of their country. It is
their government's responsibility for having allowed them to be placed in this
unenviable predicament; they should be able to sue their government for
negligence.
T
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hat would give their government greater incentive to be less
tolerant of such corrupt and dishonest practices, and to taking effective
action to stamp them out.
I
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hear what President Putin
is saying about the injustice of 'punishing the innocent' for the wrongs of the
guilty. Yet, that has always been the effect of 'generic banning and sanctions;
that more innocent people suffer than those who are presumed or proven guilty.
Take how Israel collectively punishes the Palestinian people, or how the West
is currently collectively punishing the Russian people with the imposition of
economic and financial sanctions over the Ukraine conflict. Should innocent
Russians be able to take legal action against the EU and America? If not, why
should it be different in the sports arena?
P
|
resident Putin is considered to be a strong leader, so it is
certainly not yet demonstrated that he and his Government has given a resolute
message to the relevant authorities and sports bodies in Russia that they must
clean up this unacceptable situation as a matter of urgency.
OWOHROD
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