DOPING SCHEDULE
FEBRUARY 21 2009 17:46h
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`WADA has a good attitude to say that on the principle they will not budge,` Rogge said after meeting Figel.
Top athletes such as tennis world number one Rafa Nadal and Olympic pole vault champion Yelena Isinbayeva, have criticised the "whereabouts" rule under which they have to give three month's notice of where they will be for an hour a day.
EU Sports Commissioner Jan Figel told Reuters WADA should put the procedure, in force since Jan. 1, on hold until he gives a legal opinion on it in the coming months.
A legal challenge has been lodged in Belgium on behalf of 65 athletes, including cyclists and volleyball players, who argue the rule breaks EU privacy laws. FIFPro, the soccer players union, is also mounting a case.
"I would urge the president of WADA for the sake of clarity and cohesion between many stake holders, WADA should put on hold this article and await the opinion of our working party on this and then make a final decision," Figel said in an interview.
Figel said he would address the issue next week when he meets WADA chief John Fahey in Lausanne and he expected the European Commission, the EU executive arm, to come forward with its legal opinion on the matter in the next two months.
"It is better to delay this decision since anti-doping policy deserves sensitivity and time. The reward would be very high for the credibility of WADA and the competitions. It would show more fairness in dealing with sportsmen and women," Figel said.
International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge defended the WADA rule in Brussels on Friday but said "the circumstances could be adapted" through talks between WADA and athletes.
"WADA has a good attitude to say that on the principle they will not budge," Rogge said after meeting Figel.
"The principle of the whereabouts is important and I believe that. Without whereabouts you cannot have out-of-competition testing."
Figel, however, said it was his opinion that "the WADA code should be further looked upon and potentially amended".
Earlier this week, WADA director general David Howman said WADA would stick with the rule but would consider any legitimate changes later if serious problems emerged.
WADA says out-of-competition testing is key to catching cheats because short-notice tests are essential since many illegal substances can become untraceable within 24 hours.
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