European Athletics president Svein Arne Hansen does not expect Russia to return to international competition in time for next year’s Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

Russian athletes were banned indefinitely by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) after a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) report alleged widespread corruption and a state-sponsored drugs culture in a sporting superpower.

An IAAF inspection committee is due to visit Russia in January to oversee the country’s reform process and ensure the criteria set out by the sport’s ruling body are met.

The committee will report back to the IAAF Council at the earliest at its meeting in Cardiff, Wales, on March 27, less than five months before the Olympics.

“For the moment they have to fulfil the conditions, but I cannot really see them competing in Rio,” Svein Arne Hansen, whose body includes Russia as a member federation, told Athletics Weekly magazine this week.

“They must have a cultural change. They must get rid of all those people from before.”

European Athletics, which oversees the sport in Europe, works with the IAAF world governing body on doping and medical issues.

However, the organisation will have no influence on the decision to reinstate Russia as an IAAF member, which will only be made on the recommendation of the world ruling body’s inspection team.

Full cooperation

Norwegian Hansen believes that Russia’s Athletic Federation (ARAF), which has confirmed it will cooperate fully with the inspection team, will work hard to change the culture.

“We know some good people in Russian athletics and I’m sure they will be elected. We hope that some new people will come in who really understand that this must be changed,” he said.

Russian athletes will not be able to compete in the world indoor championships in Oregon in March.

Russia has also lost the hosting rights to next year’s race walking World Cup and the World Junior Championships which were scheduled to take place in Cheboksary and Kazan, respectively.

Meanwhile, the second part of an explosive Independent Commission (IC) report into allegations of systematic doping and “corruption and bribery” at the highest levels of international athletics will be released on January 14, WADA said earlier this week.

The first part of the report authored by former WADA chief Dick Pound, was released in November following an investigation that lasted nearly a year, and found a “deeply rooted culture of cheating” in Russian athletics.

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