China has shown marked improvement in the fight against drugs in
sport, but was far from perfect, World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)
president Dick Pound said on Tuesday.
Although satisfied that Chinese authorities had a "sense of
urgency and importance" regarding doping in sport, Pound said he
was not sure whether they knew how deep the problem went.
"We're not sure and I don't even think the Chinese authorities
are sure how widespread the problem is," Pound said at a news
conference.
"It's a large, important country that has a problem that perhaps
has not been as well recognized as it ought to have been in the
past."
Pound cited the recent discovery of systematic doping of
athletes at a sports school in northeastern China as evidence "that
there is indeed a problem and that this may not be the only
circumstance."
In August, Chinese anti-doping officials unearthed hundreds of
doses of EPO, testosterone and steroids at Anshan Athletics School
in Liaoning Province, and found that coaches had administered
banned substances to athletes as young as 15.
Pound described the revelations as "a major breakdown in the
system" and a "wake-up call" for Chinese authorities - similar to
the BALCO doping scandal in the United States.
"It is very embarrassing to find that one of your sporting
schools has a directorship that is systematically doping athletes,
many of whom are not really sure what it is they are being given,"
he said.
While the quality of China's equipment, research and scientists
was satisfactory, Pound said China needed to do more doping tests,
and compared China's 7,000 tests per year with Australia's
8,000.
"That's an imbalance that is really not commensurate with a
really effective anti-doping programme. I don't think the number of
tests performed bears any relationship to the size of the sporting
population in China."
Pound, who toured screening laboratories and met with Beijing
2008 Olympic officials this week, said the country's "reputation"
as an exporter of performance enhancing drugs was "not one that the
Chinese authorities like."
But bureaucracy and other "impediments" in allowing testers
access to athletes - similar to those in the former Soviet Union
and Eastern bloc countries - had hampered China's anti-doping
efforts.
"This is a large and complicated country, more so than ones that
are perhaps more centrally organized.
"The division of responsibility in many of the areas... whether
its health, science, police, customs - all of these are different
departments. In order to get them together, that's a major
bureaucratic effort," he said.
China, "in a structural and organizational sense", had built a
sound framework to tackle doping in sport, Pound added. "They've
now got to make everything work. They've got to get right down
where the cheating is taking place and find a way to stop it.
Partly through education and partly through rigorous testing."
(China Daily October 12, 2006)