
Data | With 62 doping violations by athletes, India stands second in drug abuse
The Hindu
Kamalpreet Kaur’s sporting discipline, the discus throw, is one of the least impacted by doping scandals
Kamalpreet Kaur, the 26-year-old Indian discus thrower, was banned for three years with effect from March 29 after she tested positive for a prohibited substance earlier this year. With Kaur, 62 Indian athletes have been caught doping or in possession of banned substances, according to the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) of World Athletics. Only Russia has recorded more doping violations than India with 87 athletes receiving punishment. Chart 1 shows the nationalities of the 473 violators recorded by the AIU.
Hover over the charts to find the exact figures
Charts appear incomplete. Click to remove AMP mode
With Kaur’s infraction, the number of Indian women with doping violations has gone up to 17. However, over 70% of all doping violations in India were by men. This share decreases to 60% if all the world athletes are considered. Chart 2 shows the gender-wise split of doping violations in India and the world.
Interestingly, Kaur’s sporting discipline (discus throw) is among the least impacted by doping scandals. The world over, most doping violations are by long-distance runners. Globally, close to 33% of all violations were by long-distance runners, 23% by short-distance sprinters and 10% by middle-distance runners. All the other disciplines including games involving throws and jumps formed less than 5% of violations. Chart 3 shows the discipline-wise split of doping violations the world over. The number of violations by Indian athletes is also annotated in the graph. Four Indian long-distance runners have been caught doping. But with 21 violations, short-distance runners stand out. In total, runners formed about half the Indian doping violations.
This is Kaur’s first anti-doping rule violation. Notably, the infraction carries a punishment of four years, but was reduced to three as Kaur admitted to doping within 20 days of receiving the notice. Chart 4 shows the punishments received by athletes the world over for doping violations. The corresponding number for Indian athletes is annotated in the graph. Close to 56% of athletes got a four-year ban. The share of such athletes increases to 83% if only Indian athletes are considered.
Thirty-six athletes globally have got lifetime bans. Only one such instance has been listed for India. Hammer thrower Jitender Singh was banned for life after testing positive a second time.













