The testing agency said it does not typically reveal the name of minors - Valieva is just 15 years old - but did so due to "the necessity for official information due to heightened public interest."
The suspension prohibits her from competing in the Beijing Olympics, and thus the individual event, however, Valieva appealed the suspension and RUSADA cleared her to compete on Feb. 9.
The IOC is now challenging RUSADA's decision, according to the ITA, and the IOC said a rushed decision from the Court of Arbitration for Sport will take place before the women's event.
"The IOC will exercise its right to appeal and not to wait for the reasoned decision by RUSADA, because a decision is needed before the next competition the athlete is due to take part in (Women Single Skating, 15 February 2022)," the ITA wrote.
The International Skating Union also released a statement. "The ISU will exercise its right to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) the decision of the RUSADA Disciplinary Anti Doping Committee of February 9 to lift the provisional suspension and to ask CAS to reinstate the provisional suspension," they said.
下面個人心得: I almost don’t care if Valieva gets to compete or not? Because, that’s is only the symptom of a bigger problem.
I haven’t heard the coaching team mentioned at all in this situation. Everyone focuses on the girl, who is not in charge. This is how the Russian media wants us to focus on instead of looking to the coaching practices at Sambo 70.
If Kamila gets cleared and competes, does that mean it is ok to use illegal drugs to aid in training? Because that’s the message they are now sending.
If Kamila is banned, what about Sasha and Anna?
I mean even the Russian coaches we know here admits that if one skater was doping, all of them are doping at the same rink. But I’ve heard no questions raised