Russian athlete Yulia Stepanova cleared to race as individual

IAAF accept doping whistleblower’s application to compete at continental championships

Russian doping whistleblower Yulia Stepanova’s application to compete as an individual athlete has been accepted, the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) said on Friday.

The former drug cheat's revelations helped expose the massive doping problem in her country and the middle-distance runner left Russia and went into hiding after disclosing the issue.

Stepanova looks likely now to make a comeback as early as Wednesday in the 800 metres after European Athletics approved her participation in the continental championships in Amsterdam.

She is due to hold a news conference on Monday in the Dutch city, together with the president of European Athletics Svein Arne Hansen. The IAAF said its doping review board unanimously accepted Stepanova's application, adding that it had received more than 80 formal requests from Russian athletes seeking exceptional eligibility to compete in an individual capacity.

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“Stepanova is now eligible to compete in international competitions as an independent neutral athlete,” the IAAF said in a statement.

European Athletics said it recognised Stepanova’s “exceptional contribution to the protection and promotion of clean athletes” and cleared her to compete in Amsterdam next week.

It was still unclear, however, if the middle-distance runner would now be eligible to compete at the Rio Olympics, with the IAAF saying it was up to organisers to decide.

"Ms Stepanova's participation as a neutral athlete in international competition is still subject to acceptance by the organiser of the competition in question, in accordance with the rules of that competition," the IAAF said. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said it would study the decision once it received the file from the IAAF.

Painted a picture

Russian track and field athletes are suspended from competing anywhere after a series of reports, triggered by Stepanova’s revelations, painted a picture of systematic doping in the country.

The IAAF has said only some Russian track and field athletes fulfilling exceptional criteria, including repeated drugs testing outside Russia, can take part in the Rio Games under a neutral flag.

The IOC, however, insists any Russian track and field athlete cleared to compete in the Games starting on August 5th would do so under the country’s flag, appeasing Moscow in the run-up to the Rio Games.

More than 65 Russian athletes have since filed an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, saying they should not be punished along with drugs cheats.