The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has given the Kenyan National Anti-Doping Organisation (NADO) 21 days to respond to claims of non-compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code.

In a meeting held on Thursday, September 11, WADAโ€™s Compliance Review Committee (CRC) accused NADO of failing to comply with several requirements following an audit carried out last year.

The audit carried out in May 2024 exposed serious gaps in Kenyaโ€™s anti-doping rules, regulations and legislation, with the audit revealing the countryโ€™s failure to meet international anti-doping standards.

Kenya was thus given 21 days to file a response to the claims made by the Compliance Review Committee; failure to which a list of proposed consequences would be implemented.

However, WADA did not explicitly reveal the exact breaches made by Kenya, but it gave the countryโ€™s anti-doping agency up to October 2, 2025, to comply.

โ€œThe Signatory has 21 days following the date of receipt of the formal notice of non-compliance to dispute WADAโ€™s allegation of non-compliance as well as the proposed consequences,โ€ WADA noted.

โ€œIt should be noted that the decision (including the consequences) will enter into force on 2 October 2025, unless the decision is challenged before the same date,โ€ the statement further read.

The ultimatum now placesย Kenya at risk of sanctions from the international organisation. Kenya risks being barred from hosting WADA-related sports events, including regional, continental and world championships.

It comes a week after Kenya announced that it will formally apply to host the 2029 World Athletics Championship after it successfully hosted the African National Championship (CHAN).

Speaking on September 4, Athletics Kenya President Jackson Tuwei said the country had already completed preparing the bid and would be submitting it to World Athletics.

โ€œWe have already prepared the documents, and we are going to present them when we go to Tokyo. After that, we will follow it up because there are requirements that we need to fulfil,โ€ said Tuwei.

President William Ruto backed Tuweiโ€™s sentiments, stating that his administration would fully back the bid with a focus on upgrading the current sports infrastructure.


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