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Five weightlifters suspended after London 2012 retests

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FILE PHOTO: Ukraine's Oleksiy Torokhtiy celebrates as he wins gold after a successful lift in the men's 105kg Group A weightlifting clean and jerk competition at the ExCel venue during the London 2012 Olympic Games August 6, 2012. REUTERS/Dominic Ebenbichler

(Reuters) – Five weightlifters, including two Olympic champions, have been provisionally suspended after retests of their samples from the 2012 London Olympics came back positive for doping, the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) said.

Ukraines Oleksiy Torokhtiy could now be stripped of the Olympic title he won in the 105-kg category in London while Azerbaijans Bulgaria-born Valentin Hristov could lose his bronze medal from the 56-kg category.

“The International Olympic Committee is responsible to decide about any consequences relating to the athletes participation in the 2012 London Olympic Games,” the IWF said.

“In all cases where it is determined that an Anti-Doping Rule Violation was committed, the responsibility to conduct results management will be transferred to the IWF in terms of consequences extending beyond the athletes Olympic Games participation.”

Uzbekistans Ruslan Nurudinov, who came fourth in the 105kg in London, Armenias Melanie Daluzyan and Belaruss Mikalai Novikau were also suspended after the International Olympic Committees (IOC) re-analysis discovered adverse analytical findings, the IWF said in a statement.

Nurudinov won the Olympic title in Rio in 2016 as well as the world title in Poland in 2013 and the gold medal at the Asian Games in Jakarta this year.

Weightlifting, which featured at the first modern Olympics in 1896, is under fire over widespread doping offences and the IOC has threatened to remove it from the Paris 2024 Games if it fails to improve its record. The sport remains on probation.

The IWF has adopted a tougher anti-doping policy this year under which repeat-offender nations can be banned outright from the Olympics.

Reporting by Angel Krasimirov; editing by Clare Fallon

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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