Thursday, May 21, 2026

Russia pays $6.3 Million fine to World Athletics

Russia paid $6.3 million to World Athletics on Wednesday to escape expulsion from track and field’s world governing body.
The federation, known as RusAF had a Saturday deadline to pay a $5 million fine and $1.3 million in costs to World Athletics. That followed the alleged use of forged medical documents to give an athlete an alibi for being unavailable for drug testing. RusAF was threatened with expulsion after it missed an initial July 1 deadline to pay.
“World Athletics can confirm it has today received the funds to settle RusAF’s two outstanding payments,” World Athletics said in a statement.
The Russian Sports Ministry put up the funds after RusAF said it couldn’t pay. The ministry said Wednesday that it gave RusAF “a one-time subsidy for developing the sport, including clearing the debt to World Athletics,” but didn’t specify how much it had transferred.
After the July 1 deadline was missed, World Athletics extended a freeze on allowing Russian athletes to compete as “authorized neutral athletes” in international events until the money is paid and RusAF presents a plan for future anti-doping reforms. The next deadline is to present a draft plan for review by Aug. 31.
RusAF is still serving a suspension imposed in 2015 by World Athletics over widespread doping.

Hot this week

Production up, but the ‘cost’ variable weighs heavily

Production is up in 2021 for the Italian agricultural...

Luminos Fund’s catch-up education programs in Ethiopia recognized

The Luminos Fund has been named a top 10...

Well-planned cities essential for a resilient future in Africa concludes the World Urban Forum

The World Urban Forum (WUF) concluded today with a...

Private sector deemed key to unlocking AfCFTA potential

The private sector’s role is vital to fully unlock...

India’s Africa policy needs sustained engagement, not periodic summits

One of the persistent weaknesses of the India-Africa Forum...

Fall in Love with Impact, Not Your Organization”: The Development Sector’s Toughest Lesson

The Mastercard Foundation, a Canadian organization, celebrated its 20th...

University of Gondar, Mastercard Foundation scholars advance disability inclusion

A decade-long partnership between the University of Gondar, Queen’s...

Name: Tamiru Moges

2. Education:    Marketing Management (BA Degree) 3. Company name: B-Creative Marketing...

“Country Ownership Begins with Women’s Leadership”

In Ethiopia’s ongoing effort to strengthen its health system,...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img