WADA: Allegations by former JADCO official ‘serious’
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — The director general of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said yesterday that Jamaican officials need to respond soon to accusations from a former insider who alleges drug-testing procedures are lax.
Writing this week in Sports Illustrated, Renee Anne Shirley, the former executive director of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO), said the island agency had no shortage of “troubling” problems during her tenure as the top official. The commission did not have the staff to carry out rigorous anti-doping programmes, she wrote, and just one out-of-competition test was done between February 2012 and the start of the London Olympics five months later.
When she raised various concerns, no JADCO or Cabinet official would take them seriously and she left the agency in frustration in February.
“The current programme — while improved — makes a mockery of Jamaica’s posturing and flames suspicion more than it douses it,” Shirley wrote in her article for Sports Illustrated.
WADA Director General David Howman said Shirley has raised several “serious issues” that need to be investigated by the Montreal-based organisation, although he said the agency was aware that there had been scarce pre-London Games testing done on the island. He said Jamaica needs to respond to Shirley’s statements, which include the revelation that Jamaica had no officer keeping track of athletes so that they could be tested out-of-competition.
While Jamaican politicians have wasted no time issuing statements congratulating the Caribbean country’s sprinters on their dominant medal-winning performances at the World Championships in Moscow, island officials have been largely mum about Shirley’s statements this week.
Calls and an email seeking comment from JADCO officials were not immediately returned yesterday. A call for Dr Herb Elliott, chairman of the anti-doping commission and Jamaica’s team doctor at the Beijing Olympics in 2008, went unanswered.
Earlier this month, Elliott told a local newspaper that JADCO did 106 tests last year, which he believed was “adequate” for a country with a population of 2.7 million people.
Howman said many of the matters raised by Shirley in her article are historical and WADA does not have the authority to do anything about incidents in the past.
The debate over the rigor of Jamaica’s anti-doping programme has gone on for years, as the small Caribbean nation has consistently racked up more medals in track and field than countries 10 times its size. Led by track superstar Usain Bolt, Jamaican sprinters had a dominant run at the London Olympics, winning a record haul of 12 medals, surpassing the 11 they won in Beijing in 2008.
In Moscow, Bolt picked up three more titles and is the most decorated male athlete in World Championship history with eight gold and two silver medals. Fellow Jamaican speedster Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce also earned three gold medals as the island swept the men’s and women’s 100m, 200m and 4×100 relays.