Set a date for the decision on the incident of the Russian figure skating star Valeeva in the “Winter Olympics”

Next Monday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport will decide the fate of 15-year-old Russian snowboarder Kamila Valeeva, after she helped win the team gold medal for her country at the current Beijing Winter Olympics.

Valeeva's case threatens the integrity of the current games, and the arbitration court said it would hold a video hearing on Sunday.

"After the hearing, the committee will discuss and prepare for the arbitration that includes the decision," she wrote in a statement Saturday.

"It is expected that the decision will be communicated to the parties on the afternoon of Monday, February 14," a day before Valeeva's scheduled participation in the women's singles figure skating competition.

And the International Agency that supervises doping tests during the Winter Olympics, announced on Friday that Valleeva had undergone a positive test on December 25, during the Russian Championships in St. Petersburg by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency, and the result was positive.

The agency supervising doping tests revealed that the Russian woman had taken trimetazidine, which is usually prescribed to treat dizziness and sore throat, and is banned by the World Doping Agency (WADA).

The substance also aids in blood flow and aids endurance.

The result of this examination was known through a laboratory in Stockholm accredited by the World Anti-Doping Agency on February 8, that is, the day after Valeeva won the gold medal with her country's national team.

The Russian Sports Agency quickly suspended it temporarily before lifting the ban the next day, but the International Olympic Committee decided to appeal the decision to lift the penalty before the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Follow our latest local and sports news and the latest political and economic developments via Google news