Russia said on Monday it hoped its anti-doping body RUSADA would have its suspension lifted in November, but the World Anti-Doping Agency said it still had "significant work" to do. Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov said Russia would "work diligently" towards a clean culture and listed what he said was progress on restructuring its anti-doping system after years of cheating scandals across a wide range of sports. "We are open for all kinds of inspections of individual athletes and organisations such as RUSADA," he told an international meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland. "We are ready to pass any kind of external inspection." A series of reports by the world agency, WADA, have found that Russia conducted rampant state-sponsored doping, and led to the country's track-and-field federation being barred from last year's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. The vast majority of Russian competitors also seem certain to miss the World Athletics Championships in London in August. WADA President Craig Reedie said RUSADA, suspended in 2015, for systematically breaking anti-doping rules, had taken steps forward in the past year, but more were needed. "There remains significant work to do. (RUSADA) must demonstrate its processes are autonomous and independent from outside interference," Reedie told the Lausanne meeting. In a reminder of the continuing fallout from the scandal, the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Monday upheld a lifetime ban on Sergei Portugalov, former chief of the Russian Athletics Federation's Medical Commission, for his role in providing illicit substances to Russian competitors. In a 2015 report, WADA had written that Portugalov supplied performance-enhancing drugs to athletes and coaches, administered doping programs and "even injected athletes himself". Kolobkov, a former Olympic gold medal-winning fencer, was at times conciliatory, at times defiant. He described the Rio track-and-field ban as a "tragedy", and Russia's exclusion from the Paralympics in the Brazilian city as "simply inhuman." "Clean athletes should not be deprived of the chance to take part in competition at any level as this contradicts the ideals of sports," he said. Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier this month denied state-sponsored doping but acknowledged there had been individual instances of cheating that indicated the country's current system was not working. "The ball is in their camp and we will see when they will be able to deliver this program," WADA Director General Olivier Niggli said. He described Putin's comments as "very encouraging, going in the right direction". "I hope that politics can now stay at the door and we can all focus on protecting clean sports and clean athletes," Niggli said. A WADA-commissioned report by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren found state-backed doping involved more than 1,000 Russian athletes. McLaren told the meeting: "(The) state sponsor from a Russian perspective is Putin and the inner circle. The evidence we have is up to the sports minister. It stops there," he said, referring to Kolobkov's predecessor Vitaly Mutko. "Institutional or not, there are many words you can use... What we had was a conspiracy involving Russian officials."