Spain passes new anti-doping law

The new law includes the expansion of doping tests for athletes to night hours.
MADRID (AP) - Spain passed a new anti-doping law on Thursday that it hopes will clean up the country s tarnished image after the Operation Puerto case and boost Madrid s bid for the 2020 Olympics.
The new law approved by parliament includes the expansion of doping tests for athletes to night hours (11 p.m. to 6 a.m.) and costly fines for those who deal in doping substances. It also creates a new national anti-doping agency with greater autonomy, powers and an additional focus on athletes health.
Dealing in banned substances in Spain will lead to fines of up to €400,000 ($530,000). The law, however, does not make doping a crime for athletes, just a sports violation subject to bans from competition.
Ana Munoz, who will stay on as the director of the newly named Sports Health Protection Agency, said the law would help Spain increase its "credibility" in the fight against banned performance-enhancing substances and practices.
"This is the end of an opening phase and an indispensable step to bring us in line with other countries," Munoz said. "It s news that will strengthen the Madrid 2020 candidacy and guarantee that all clean athletes can compete under equal conditions."
Spain s first anti-doping law was passed in 2006. The previous lack of doping legislation harmed Spain s image on doping and hampered police investigations like Operation Puerto. That case ended with the doctor at the center of the blood-doping ring, Eufemiano Fuentes, declared guilty and given a one-year suspended sentence for endangering the health of cyclists.
The judge s decision to destroy the evidence after the Puerto trial has been heavily criticized by anti-doping authorities, who have appealed the ruling.
Madrid is competing with Istanbul and Tokyo for the 2020 Games. The IOC will select the host city on Sept. 7 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The new law was passed two days before the bid cities make presentations to national Olympic committees in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Among measures directed at sports health, the new law obliges sports facilities to be equipped to deal with emergencies related to heart and breathing problems.