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 India cricket stars reject anti-dope code
    August 03 2009 at 04:23PM Get IOL on your
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New Delhi - India's sports minister and the country's lone Olympic champion on Monday hit out at cricketers for refusing to divulge their daily location under an anti-doping code.

"All sportspersons should adhere to it and happily follow it," sports minister Manohar Singh Gill told reporters a day after the nation's top cricketers declined to comply with the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) code.

"The world is concerned about doping and we should support Wada. India has accepted regulatory testing and we adhere to it.

"It should be made clear to sportspersons that testing does not interfere in anyone's personal life."

The clause requires players to detail their whereabouts
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Sunday gave its blessing to players who did not accept the whereabouts clause of the WADA code, saying it infringed their privacy.
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The clause requires players to detail their whereabouts for an hour between 6am and 11pm every day for the next three months to allow random out-of-competition testing.

Olympic shooting gold medallist Abhinav Bindra urged the cricketers to accept the code, saying the clause was "no big deal".

"They should just accept it and get on with life," said Bindra, who won India's first individual Olympic gold at Beijing in 2008.

"I think it is all due to a lack of understanding. But if cricket wants to become a global sport and fight the menace of drugs, they must agree to the Wada code.

Anybody missing three doping tests over 18 months faces a ban of up to two years
"I have been part of the code for a few years and it is no big deal."

India's top players are the only ones in world cricket, a non-Olympic discipline, who had not signed the Wada documents by the August 1 deadline set by the International Cricket Council.

According to Wada rules, anybody missing three doping tests over 18 months faces a ban of up to two years.

"We have no problem with the testing but we have a problem with the system of testing players," BCCI president Shashank Manohar told reporters on Sunday.


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