Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 20 – Because of the doping
scandal which is about the Russian state more than about Russian athletes,
Moscow officials have concluded that it is unlikely that any Russian athletes
will participate in the Rio Olympics and have now turned their attention to
preventing the international sports authorities from taking the 2018 World Cup
away from Russia.
That is the judgment of Nikita
Belogolovtsev who says that it would take “a miracle” for Russian athletes to
be allowed to go the Olympiad but that it is still possible to prevent the loss
of the 2016 World Cup competition because most international groups don’t see a
way to shift it given the short time and the high cost of doing so (http://polit.ru/article/2016/07/19/olgames/).
“It seems to me,” the Russian sports
journalist says, “that now our diplomatic efforts must be – and certainly will
be – focused on attempts to defend the 2018 football world championship because
it is obvious that it is in immediate danger” because the WADA has talked about
“systematic” violations of anti-doping procedures in Russia at Sochi and
elsewhere.
Russia’s application for the 2018
World Cup was, Belogolovtsev points out, “to a large degree based on the fact
that look we carried out all these earlier championships in a wonderful way and
we will conduct that championship in the same way.”
“Now,” he says, “there is no
certainty” that Moscow will be allowed to a competition that for Vladimir Putin
is one second in importance only to the Sochi Olympiad over which a shadow has
now been cast. Indeed, were it not for
the fact that most international groups don’t think they have the time or money
to shift it, Russia would almost certainly be stripped of that competition.
Despite the importance of the World
Cup for the Kremlin, Russia is not now close to being ready to host a
competition that most of the world will watch. Many of the stadiums are not
finished, and much of the infrastructure needed to support the massive influx
of competitors and fans has yet to be built.
The latest indication of those
problems came this week when St. Petersburg officials cancelled the contract
they had had with firms involved in building a new stadium in Russia’s norther
capital. The officials said that the
firms had been unable to account for some 39 million US dollars they had been
given (rferl.org/content/russia-petersburg-world-cup-stadium-canceled/27860165.html).
Russian
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev recently denounced the firm, Inzhtransstroy-SPB
as “disgraceful.” And Vadim Tyulpanov,
head of the Duma committee with oversight over preparations for the 2018
competition, said the situation in St. Petersburg was a serious cause for
concern.
“If
the stadium is not commissioned in December,” the Duma deputy said, “we won’t
be able to host the tournament in June.”
According to Tyulpanov, the stadium is approximately 85 percent complete.
Stadiums and support facilities in the more than a dozen other places in the Russia
where the competition is slated to be held are in many cases far less complete than
that.
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