Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, whose time in office has been tarnished by allegations of state-sponsored doping, has been promoted to deputy prime minister, the Kremlin said Wednesday. President Vladimir Putin approved Mutko's appointment to a new post of deputy prime minister in charge of sport, tourism and youth politics, adding that Mutko's deputy, former Olympic fencer Pavel Kolobkov, would take over as sports minister.
Mutko's move to the new position is the latest in a series of high-profile staffing changes in the Russian government and comes on the heels of doping scandals that saw the country's track and field team sidelined from the Rio Olympics in August. The 57-year-old's name has emerged in World Anti-Doping Agency reports containing evidence of state-sponsored doping in Russian athletics and other disciplines. WADA founder Dick Pound, who headed an independent commission that probed doping in Russia, said last year it was "not possible" for Mutko to have been unaware of the vast rot in the system and "if he was aware of it, then he was complicit in it."
A programme by German public broadcaster ARD which aired in June suggested Mutko had been involved in covering up positive doping tests by a footballer playing for FC Krasnodar in 2014, a charge the minister dismissed as "a deliberate attack" on Russia. Sports minister since 2008, Mutko has over the past year repeatedly called for reforms to Russia's scandal-ridden anti-doping programme while slamming the West for what he said were attempts to sideline Russia from international competition.
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