China's State General Administration of Sport (CSGAS) has
started an investigation into a "collective doping" scandal
involving an athletics school in Northeast China, the CSGAS
announced in Beijing on August 23.
In a doping raid spearheaded by officials from the Chinese
Olympic Committee's anti-doping commission and the CSGAS on Aug.
8,exactly two years away from the opening ceremony of the 2008
Beijing Olympic Games, the appalling evidences of collective doping
were found.
When the officials made an announced visit to an unnamed
Northeastern Chinese training camp being used by the Liaoning
Anshan Athletics School, school staff were caught injecting teenage
students with banned substances.
The anti-doping officials confiscated a large amount of illegal
drugs including erythropoietin (EPO) and testosterone, and
hypodermic needles in the room of school headmaster Shao
Huibin.
The school was preparing for the 10th Liaoning Provincial Junior
Games.
The Anshan school was the second Chinese sports school charged
of "collective doping".
Liaoning Shenyang Sports School, based in Liaoning's provincial
capital Shenyang and about 80 kilometers away from Liaoning's third
largest city Anshan, was charged of collective doping in August
2002.
Staff at the Anshan school face criminal charges under China's
anti-doping code, which was enacted in February 2004.
"It is the second doping scandal involving a sports school and
it is even more serious because it happened after the promulgation
of China's anti-doping code and it happened as the 2008 Olympics is
closing in," said a CSGAS statement faxed to Xinhua News Agency
Wednesday evening.
"The management of the school not only defied the law but also
put the youth's health at great danger," said the statement.
Liaoning is a sports powerhouse in China, churning out bunches
of Olympic and world champions, and its status in Chinese athletics
is unmatchable.
Guru athletics coach Ma Junren, who led Chinese women runners to
a sweep of world records and world titles in the 1990s, is from
Liaoning and he had retired from the position as Liaoning's deputy
sports chief. Ma's then immediate superior Cui Dalin is now a
deputy sports chief of the country.
Liaoning is also home to hero-turned-villain Sun Yingjie, who
had been tipped as a medal hopeful for the 2008 Olympic women's
runs before she went down as a doping cheat in 2005.
(Xinhua News Agency August 24, 2006)