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Report: Russian doping scandal 'institutional conspiracy'

Report: Russian doping scandal 'institutional conspiracy'
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When asked about a New York Times article alleging that some Russian officials admitted to the "institutional doping" by athletes, Kremlin spokesman Dimitri Peskov said, "We categorially deny it."

"From the very start (of the doping scandal) we denied any involvement of the state, state agencies, services or bodies in the possible use of doping by athletes," Peskov told reporters Wednesday.

The Kremlin now awaits the results of an investigation, he added.

[Previous story, posted 2:30 a.m. ET]

Russian officials are no longer denying alleged "institutionalized" doping of the country's athletes during the 2014 Sochi Olympics, a report from The New York Times said.

The newspaper spoke with three top Russian sports officials. Anna Antseliovich, the acting director general of Russia's national antidoping agency, called the doping program "an institutional conspiracy."

But Russian President Vladimir Putin recently said at a news conference that claims about a state-run doping system were "absolutely impossible." He has vowed to take action on the broader problem of performance-enhancing substances.

"Like any other country, we have a doping problem," Putin said. "We must admit this, and by doing so, we must do everything in our power to prevent any doping."

A 'systematic and centralized cover-up'

The New York Times story follows a report commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency that claimed the Russian state conspired with athletes and sporting officials to undertake a doping program that was unprecedented in its scale and ambition.

A "systematic and centralized cover-up" benefited more than 1,000 Russian athletes across 30 sports, Canadian law professor Richard McLaren said in an update to the report first published in July.

"We know for sure it went to the Deputy Minister of Sport level -- beyond that we have no evidence to indicate that it went any further," McLaren told CNN.

The International Olympic Committee announced after the WADA report it would retest all 254 samples collected from Russian athletes who took part in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The Kremlin said it would study the report thoroughly, but will "refrain from forming an emotional response to allegations of the 'state conspiracy,'" according to state news agency Sputnik.

Russia's ministry for sport denied a state-sponsored program to aid doping in sports and stressed it is "continuing its fight against doping from the position of 'zero tolerance.'"

Evidence of doping found from Olympians' samples

In Sochi, two female ice hockey players' samples were found to contain male DNA, while samples from two gold medalists and one female silver medalist were found to have "physiologically impossible salt readings," according to the WADA report.

Also, 44 of the samples examined -- including 12 from medal-winning athletes -- had scratches and marks on the caps of the bottles, indicating tampering.

Fifteen Russian medal-winning athletes from London 2012 were also found to have been involved in doping.

Russia won 72 medals at the 2012 London Games, 21 of which were gold. The country won 33 medals at 2014 Sochi Games, 13 of which were gold.

"The Russian Olympic team corrupted the London games on an unprecedented scale - the extent of which will probably never be fully established," the report said.

'Clean image'

The scope of the subversion is "alarming," WADA President Sir Craig Reedie has said.

Previously, the IOC said the findings show a "fundamental attack on the integrity of the Olympic Games and on sport in general."

Following the WADA report, Russian parliament member Dmitry Svishchev said the accusations were "unsubstantiated," while politician Igor Lebedev said "there were no facts and no evidence."

'Unprecedented'

The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) has said it agreed McLaren that "it is time that this manipulation stops" and says it is pursuing "a more specific, intelligence-based retesting program."

The International Paralympic Committee said the findings of the report were "unprecedented and astonishing."

"They strike right at the heart of the integrity and ethics of sport," the IPC said in a statement.

In November, Putin signed a new law to criminalize any encouragement for doping, national news agency Tass reported.

Anyone found guilty of inducing an athlete to use drugs faces a fine of up to 1.1 million rubles ($11,400) or a jail term of up to three years, plus suspension from "professional activities" for up to five years, depending on the circumstances.

Following the initial report, WADA called for a blanket ban on Russian competitors at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games, but the International Olympic Committee ruled each sporting federation should decide whether Russians be admitted.

Russia's track and field team and weightlifting squad were eventually excluded from the Games in August.

Official: Let's move on from doping scandal

In an interview with The New York Times, Vitaly Smirnov, the official Putin appointed to "reform the nation's antidoping system," said many athletes agreed to be doped to overcome preferential treatment that international authorities had given to athletes from Western nations.

"The general feeling in Russia is that we didn't have a chance," Smirnov told the Times.

While he publicly acknowledged the doping scandal, Smirnov expressed a desire to move on instead of blame people for what happened in the past, the Times report said.

"We have to find those reasons why young sportsmen are taking doping, why they agree to be doped," Smirnov said.

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