- Boeing, union reach preliminary deal to avert Seattle-area strike
- Neuville wins Acropolis Rally to close in on world title
- Venezuela's opposition figure fled to Spain to save 'his life'
- Trump, Harris tied on eve of televised presidential debate
- Paris Paralympics the greatest ever, say former Olympics executives
- Pope exit revives Sri Lanka's hopes in third Test against England
- Gunman kills 3 Israelis at West Bank crossing as Gaza war rages
- Marquez wins San Marino MotoGP as leader Martin pays for rain gamble
- Greece to hike fee for cruise passengers to Mykonos and Santorini
- Carsley's 'refreshing' England overhaul launches new era
- Swiss double in wheelchair marathons on final day of Paralympics
- France's Le Pen urges Macron to hold referendum to break deadlock
- Typhoon Yagi weakens, toll rises to 14 in Vietnam
- India's Randhir Singh elected Asian Olympic chief
- Under pressure, UN winds down 'unique' Iraq probe into IS crimes
- 'Proud' athletics great Weir calls time on marathon Paralympic career
- 'Brave' Afghanistan can beat anyone, says skipper ahead of NZ Test
- Vaughan warns England against 'taking the mick' after Sri Lanka collapse
- England's Moeen Ali retires from international cricket
- Japan's Hirata holds off inspired Smyth to win on Asian Tour
- China's Paralympic domination fails to ignite enthusiasm back home
- Sporting a feathered headdress, Pope finds 'Eden' in Papua New Guinea
- Super Typhoon Yagi toll rises to 9 in Vietnam after landslide
- Indonesian villagers dress corpses in ritual for the dead
- Williamson expects 'phenomenal' Root to keep breaking records
- The end of Olympic escapism for gloomy France
- Amy Adams gets real about motherhood in 'Nightbitch'
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- Child abuse scandals hang over pope's East Timor visit
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- Sabalenka dedicates US Open to family 'who never gave up' on dream
- Venezuela takes diplomatic jab at Brazil in spat over election
- Multiple people shot along highway in US state of Kentucky
- In Papua New Guinea, Pope holds mass 'at the edge of the world'
- Hewett stays positive for wheelchair tennis despite agonising defeat
- Three things on US Open champion Aryna Sabalenka
- Sabalenka downs Pegula to win US Open thriller
- USA slump to first home defeat against Canada in 67 years
- Argentina hand Australia record 67-27 loss in Rugby Championship
- England impress on Carsley bow, Germany, Dutch hit five
- AFP photographer wins top prize for Gaza coverage
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- Pedro Almodovar: chronicler of modern Spain crowned in Venice
- Trump sounds dark tone at rally, Harris 'ready' for debate
- Wirtz and Musiala dazzle to kick-start new Germany era
- Chinese teenager takes 7th gold of Paris Paralympics
- England interim boss Carsley 'respects' divided opinions over anthem
- Neuville moves to the front in the Acropolis Rally
Russian Olympic skater Valieva to learn doping fate on Monday
The 15-year-old Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva will learn on Monday whether she can remain at the Beijing Olympics, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said, as questions grew over why it took six weeks for her failed drug test to come to light.
The doping scandal surrounding the prodigious teenager threatens to tarnish the Games after the build-up was overshadowed by concerns about Covid and human rights in China.
Valieva's Beijing Olympic fate is now in the hands of CAS, which said that it would hold a video hearing on Sunday.
"Following the hearing, the panel will deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision," the top sports tribunal said in a statement on Saturday.
"It is anticipated that the decision will be notified to the parties in the afternoon of Monday, 14 February."
That is just one day before Valieva is scheduled to compete in the women's figure skating singles competition.
Valieva, who played a starring role in helping Russia win team gold in Beijing on Monday, tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine after competing at an event in Saint Petersburg on December 25.
However, the International Testing Agency says that the World Anti-Doping Agency-accredited laboratory in Stockholm only reported that Valieva had returned a positive case on February 8 -- the day after she won team gold in Beijing.
In an interview with AFP, United States Anti-Doping Agency chief Travis Tygart questioned the delay.
"The failure to report a test taken in December until after the team event in the Games is a catastrophic failure of the system to protect the public, the integrity of the Games and clean athletes who had to compete," Tygart said.
"It shouldn't have happened."
Tygart said US authorities and other nations routinely expedite test results for athletes due to be participating in major championships, precisely to avoid situations like the Valieva case.
Russia's anti-doping agency RUSADA said it had been informed that a sharp rise of Covid-19 infections at the start of the year was to blame for the delay.
International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams said he had also heard that the pandemic may have been the reason, but could not give confirmation because the testing in this case was the responsibility of WADA.
"I had understood -- but I would like to get this confirmed -- that there was some issues around Covid, but I don't know about the exact delivery of the testing and the delivery of the sample," he said on Saturday, as the doping scandal simmered.
Valieva practised in Beijing on Saturday.
The president of the Russian Figure Skating Federation, Alexander Gorchkov, said: "I repeat once again that we have no doubts about the honesty of our athlete. This affair should be carefully thought through because this crazy story raises so many questions.
"We have to find out, on one hand, all the circumstances of what happened and on the other, what happened to the December 25 doping sample almost a month and a half after it was sent to a foreign laboratory."
It is just the latest doping scandal surrounding Russian athletes in recent years at Olympic Games, which led to Russia as a country being banned for two years.
Russian competitors are allowed to take part in Beijing under the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) if they have been able to prove they were not tainted by the massive state-sponsored doping programme that targeted a range of summer and winter Olympic sports over a four-year period.
The scheme included manipulating doping tests at its home 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics when Russia topped the medals table.
In Beijing, the ROC team cannot have the Russian flag on its clothing and the Russian anthem is not played.
- Golden oldies -
Six golds were up for grabs on the eighth day of competition at the Games, in biathlon, cross-country skiing, skeleton, ski jumping, snow boarding and speed skating.
US pair Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner triumphed in the mixed team snowboard cross final.
With a combined age of 76 they were the oldest pair in the event. It was a second gold of the Games for Jacobellis.
The 40-year-old Baumgartner said experience had been key. "That’s something about being the veterans," he said.
"We are looking younger than everybody," he added.
In cross-country skiing, Russia's women took gold in the 4x5-kilometre relay, ahead of Germany and Sweden.
Snow fell on the outer mountainous areas of Beijing, with more forecast over the rest of the weekend.
The Games are relying on mostly man-made snow because the capital is one of the driest places in China.
F.Moura--PC