Wada extends anti-doping intelligence and investigations offensive to Oceania

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WADA Director, Intelligence and Investigations, Gunter Younger attends a news conference after World Anti-Doping Agency's extraordinary Executive Committee (ExCo) meeting that has banned Russian athletes from all major sporting events in the next four years, in Lausanne, Switzerland, December 9, 2019. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

The World Anti-doping Agency's I&I Director Gunter Younger said there are more than 100 operations still ongoing across the continent.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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A World Anti-doping Agency (Wada) programme, aimed at building cooperation with law enforcement in Europe, led to seizures of more than 25 tonnes of performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs), and officials now hope to see a similar impact in Oceania and Asia.

Wada launched the Intelligence and Investigations (I&I) programme in Europe in 2022, hoping it might lead to five anti-doping operations being launched among the 48 countries that participated.

Nearly a year on from the end of the programme, there are more than 100 operations still ongoing across the continent, with over 25 tonnes of illicit PEDs seized and 25 laboratories shut down, Wada’s I&I director Gunter Younger told Reuters.

“They prevented more than 500 million doses of PEDs coming on the global market, which is really significant,” said the German.

“So this is where our management decided, wow, that’s a good project, we want to continue. Now we are hoping to have the same impact, perhaps on a different scale, in Asia and Oceania.”

Wada I&I staff are meeting anti-doping and law enforcement officials on Australia’s Gold Coast this week to share intelligence and build crime-fighting capacity in the Oceania region.

The workshop is the first of six to be held across the region and Asia in 2025, as Wada pushes national anti-doping watchdogs and police to collaborate to shut down illicit PED production and distribution.

Sponsored by Sport Integrity Australia, the Gold Coast workshop is confined to Oceania participants, including New Zealand and Pacific nations.

Other workshops in Saudi Arabia, India and Thailand in 2025 will feature Asian nations, including China, a major producer of materials used in PEDs.

China’s participation is important, said Younger, to better understand the country’s legal framework for these materials.

“Sometimes powder used in PEDs or pre-cursors are allowed but trafficking is not allowed,” he said.

“So if we know (the legal framework), then we can provide this intelligence to China... if there are criminals and (activity) is against the law in China.”

China’s commitment to anti-doping efforts came into question in 2024, when it emerged 23 of the nation’s swimmers tested positive for the same banned drug in the lead up to the Tokyo Olympics but were cleared to compete at the Games.

Chinese authorities blamed contamination from a hotel kitchen after an investigation. Wada declined to contest the findings on the advice of lawyers.

While defending Wada’s handling of the case, Younger noted it had strained relations with the United States, a vital link in the global anti-doping fight.

He said the majority of illicit PEDs seized in Europe during the Wada programme were produced in Asia and bound for the US market.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation and US Justice Department launched a criminal investigation into the handling of the Chinese case in 2024.

The US government withheld more than US$3.6 million (S$4.9 million) in funding due to Wada in 2024, about 6 per cent of the global body’s annual budget. REUTERS

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