Beijing Olympics missing 300 drug tests
SMH
Relevant offers
Up to 300 test results taken from athletes at the Beijing Olympics have gone missing, says a report by official drug testing observers who attended the Games.
The team of 10 independent observers, who were given the task of reporting on drug testing procedures at the Games, detailed the startling news in their official report to the World Anti-Doping Agency.
The Report of the Independent Observers states: "Once the [Beijing] laboratory had apparently delivered all reports to the independent observer team, it transpired that around 300 test results were missing in comparison to the doping control forms."
The team checked the status of the laboratory results with the International Olympic Committee medical chairman, Dr Arne Ljungqvist, and the observers reported that the IOC also "may be missing some reports".
The independent observers were so concerned by the missing tests that they have reserved the right to submit further comment on the process, pending further cross-checking.
They also uncovered some surprising deviations from normal drug testing procedures, including the fact that the Beijing laboratory couldn't test for one banned substances - insulin. The observers noted that the samples would be stored for eight years and could be retested if the IOC deemed it necessary. Another concern was that the laboratory had failed to detect one of the quality control samples that had contained a prohibited substance.
The observers also reported that nearly half the national Olympic committees did not provide data on the whereabouts of their athletes to enable effective pre-Games and out-of-competition drug testing. The numbers tested for erythro-poetin (EPO) were "relatively low, notably in the sports where the use of EPO has been detected".
Initially, more than 110 national Olympic committees - out of the 204 teams competing - failed to provide information concerning their athletes' whereabouts. After the issue was raised at a meeting on August 7 - on the eve of the opening of the Games - 102 countries still had not provided that information.
"During the Games the IOC did not take any further action against those national Olympic committees who were non-compliant with the athlete requirements" the report states.
In total, the IOC conducted 4770 tests, which comprised 3801 urine tests and 969 blood tests. Included in the urine tests were 817 EPO tests, and included in the blood tests were 471 human growth hormone tests.
Nine athletes tested positive during the Games and, as usual, some excuses offered makes for compelling reading.
Heptathlete silver medallist Lyudmila Blonska of the Ukraine said her husband was to blame for her testing positive to an anabolic steroid methyltesto-sterone.
"She testified that her husband Sergei Blonskyi is her coach and he was completely responsible for her diet and training. She indicated that she had been having relational difficulties," the report says.
Silver and bronze medal-winning shooter Kim Jong-su, of North Korea, claimed his positive test to beta blocker propranolol was because of a heart medication he received from the team doctor.
Sponsored links
Sanzar and Sky decide it's time to titillate the fans
Time for young gun Aaron Cruden to fire
New blood introduced to All Whites
Blackadder to throw All Blacks into the fray
Clinical South Africa thrash top-ranked India
Sin-binned Jones keeps his place in Wales rugby team
Ex-All Blacks star apologises for groping teenager
Winds put paid to swimmer's dream
Parents Vancouver-bound to support son
Kiwis settle in as Winter Olympics near
Australia crushes West Indies in Adelaide
Loyal NZ cricketing servants XI
Rugby's new rules slant tipped to favour Super 14 powerhouses
Outrage as Key signals national park mining
Ex-All Blacks star apologises for groping teenager
Radar 'drone' units used for three years
Kong movie ship scuttled in strait
Fifth of adults choose pets over partner
Religion doesn't make you healthier - study
Taxi-rank crowds a 'disaster waiting to happen'
Christchurch a doubtful starter in sevens race
Capital faces a decade of rising fares
Toyota apologises as Prius recalled
Pattinson sex scenes 'disturbing'
Robin Brooke apologisies for Fiji actions
Jamie Lynn Spears, boyfriend split
King Kong ship meets watery grave
Waikato Pistons sign troublesome talent
Body found in plane's landing gear
Key confirms GST increase being considered
GST could go up to 15 per cent
Conservation land could be mined
Changing our flag won't make us more patriotic
Key announces benefit crackdown
Cook Strait swim attempt fails
King Kong ship meets watery grave