logo
Anti-doping is integral to clean sport, which is what makes 'Enhanced Games' so shameful

Anti-doping is integral to clean sport, which is what makes 'Enhanced Games' so shameful

The National18-06-2025
Late last month, I was deeply honoured to be re-elected for a final three-year term as president of the World Anti-Doping Agency. I readily accepted that honour, with a deep sense of purpose and responsibility. I can think of no more important job in sport than the one carried out by Wada. Our mission is to lead a worldwide collaborative campaign for doping-free sport, and it is something we take extremely seriously.
Growing up in Poland, sport was a huge part of my life. Like a lot of children, I spent long hours with my friends playing all kinds of sports but eventually it was athletics – specifically sprinting – on which I concentrated. It was a tremendous honour for me, for my coaches, for my family and for my hometown when I was selected to represent Poland in the 400 metres sprint competition. In those days, I did not think much about doping but I knew one thing – I would never risk bringing shame on my name or my country by taking anything that was prohibited.
Sport without doping is something we take very seriously
That is why the notion of the Enhanced Games is so abhorrent for us. For the uninitiated, this is a recently launched event that would allow athletes to use performance-enhancing substances without being subject to drug tests. In other words, it is a dystopian concept that seeks to normalise potentially dangerous drugs in sport. By offering financial inducements to susceptible athletes, it encourages them to take potent drugs in order to push their bodies beyond what the human form is capable. It is not merely controversial – it is irresponsible, and it is shameful. It threatens to erode decades of progress in athlete protection, public health and the very ethos of sport.
I think most sportspeople have the same conviction that such an event is unacceptable. Nobody grows up dreaming of winning a World Cup or an Olympic gold medal by cheating. They dream of being the best but not through deception. They imagine themselves as the fastest, the strongest, or the most skilful through natural ability and hard work, not by employing the services of a pharmacologist or unscrupulous doctor.
Winning by taking that kind of shortcut is not winning. A marathon is 42.2 kilometres long. Can someone who runs only 41.2 kilometres really claim to have completed it? Of course not. The same is true for those who take performance-enhancing substances or use prohibited methods.
There is nothing new in the desire of a small minority of people to want to push athletes by coercing them to take prohibited substances. We have seen this movie before, and it does not have a happy ending. Throughout history, we have seen the ill-effects these drugs can have on people. The short, medium and long-term health risks are real. People have died.
The Enhanced Games event was launched last month in the US, and its organisers have promised to stage it next year in Las Vegas. Unfortunately, so far, the authorities in the US have done nothing to stop this event from going ahead. In most countries, it would not have been possible because laws around the administration of controlled or illegal substances would mean an event like this simply could not be openly conducted. But for reasons that are not immediately clear, the US Anti-Doping Agency and other government bodies do not seem anxious to stand in the way.
However, it has been encouraging to see the rest of the world unite against this misguided experiment. Governments, national anti-doping organisations, sports and athletes have all come together to reject it – and rightly so. Working with such clean-sports partners around the globe, we will continue to monitor and respond to this threat with firmness and unity. This includes urging the authorities in the US to seek ways to prevent the Enhanced Games from going ahead as planned.
But this is just one of the issues we face. For the past five and a half years, Wada has been working hard for clean sport. Whether it was the politicisation of anti-doping, the problem of contamination or various attempts by people to cheat the system, it has been a period of challenges. But it has also been a time of resilience and progress. We look forward to building on that momentum and driving even greater success for the agency and the global anti-doping community in the years ahead.
Anti-doping today is global movement – one that is strong, modern, accountable, independent and transparent. We follow the evidence – wherever it leads us – because we believe that it builds trust and encourages ethical behaviour while enabling open and honest communication.
With the support of our partners, including the UAE government and the national anti-doping organisation, we are energised by innovation, collaboration and the unwavering belief that clean sport matters. Rest assured that we will work harder than ever to protect the integrity of sport and the dreams of the most important stakeholder of all, the athletes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miracle man Qin wins second world gold ahead of blockbuster
Miracle man Qin wins second world gold ahead of blockbuster

Al Etihad

time17 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

Miracle man Qin wins second world gold ahead of blockbuster

1 Aug 2025 17:35 SINGAPORE (AFP) China's Haiyang Qin celebrated "a miracle" second gold at the world championships in Singapore on Friday, on the eve of a blockbuster showdown between Katie Ledecky and Summer on by a large number of screaming Chinese fans, world record holder Qin touched the wall in 2min 07.41sec in a nailbiter of a 200m breaststroke 26-year-old won the 100m breaststroke earlier in the week, but he celebrated his second victory as if it were his punched the air before standing with his arms spread wide to soak up the acclaim of the Chinese Ippei Watanabe (2:07.70) won silver and Caspar Corbeau of the Netherlands (2:07.73) took started the race in lane eight after qualifying slowest from the semi-finals, but it made no difference as he regained in style the world title he won in 2023."Amazing," said Qin. "Have you heard of the lane eight miracle?"I did not know if I was second or third, I just heard 'whoo', so I knew I had won."Qin is returning to form after flopping at last year's Paris Olympics, where he did not even make the final of the 200m preparations for the Games were thrown into turmoil when he was implicated in a major doping scandal months before the Games.A report named Qin among 23 Chinese swimmers who had tested positive for a prescription heart drug ahead of the pandemic-delayed 2021 Tokyo were not sanctioned after the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accepted the argument of Chinese authorities that the positive tests were caused by contaminated champion Marrit Steenbergen denied Mollie O'Callaghan a sprint double as the Dutchwoman won the 100m held off a late charge from the 200m champion O'Callaghan to touch the wall in 52.55sec, forcing her Australian rival to settle for second in Torri Huske, who withdrew from a race earlier in the week after suffering from a stomach bug, was third in won world championship gold in the event in Doha last year in a field missing several big names, saving themselves for the Paris Olympics."In Doha, I was like, this is crazy to win, but in this field I don't know what to feel, I'm just so happy," said the champion Hubert Kos won a fierce battle against South Africa's Pieter Coetze in the 200m backstroke Hungarian held off a surging Coetze to seize gold in 1:53.19, just 0.17 seconds ahead of his rival, who won the 100m in Singapore. Bronze went to France's Yohann Ndoye-Brouard (1:54.62).Women's 200m breaststroke gold went to another reigning Olympic champion, the American Kate powered to victory in a championship record 2:18.50, ahead of the Russian world record holder Evgeniia Chikunova (2:19.96) and Kaylene Corbett of South Africa (2:23.52).Day six of the competition concluded with red-hot favourites Britain clinching gold in the men's 4x200m freestyle relay, with China second and Australia was Britain's first title in Singapore. Ledecky vs McIntosh On Saturday, McIntosh and Ledecky will go head-to-head in the 800m freestyle final, billed as the race of the great Ledecky, 28, is the undisputed master in the event, having won the title at the last four Olympics and updating her world record in May this McIntosh, 10 years Ledecky's junior, is in the mood to snatch her crown as she looks to join Michael Phelps as the only swimmer to win five individual titles at a single world championships. The 18-year-old Canadian has already bagged three golds from three events in Singapore, and she clocked the third-fastest 800m freestyle time ever in June.

Rotterdam supports migrants despite city's far-right politics
Rotterdam supports migrants despite city's far-right politics

The National

time21 hours ago

  • The National

Rotterdam supports migrants despite city's far-right politics

Nowhere is the Netherlands' ambivalent relationship with migration more visible than in Rotterdam, a city known both for its diversity and its growing support for the far right. The country's largest port, Rotterdam was home to the Netherlands' first mayor of Moroccan descent. It was recently dubbed 'Europe's new capital of cool' by CNN for its outdoor art galleries and innovative architecture. But Rotterdam has also mostly been governed by far-right and populist parties since 2002 and in some neighbourhoods, far-right politician Geert Wilders won the most votes in the 2023 election. "It scares me," said Joost, a 60-year-old university professor. "Our government tells us we should have the most strict policy in the world against migrants because we don't like them. But we should be more open." History repeats itself. That's what we want to share. Fenix Museum director Anne Kremers Yet at the same time, migration is being celebrated in Rotterdam. In May, the country's first migration museum, named Fenix, opened in a restored 100-year-old port warehouse. Among the glass skyscrapers, it is hard to miss, with its double-helix staircase designed by Chinese architect Ma Yansong that leads to a rooftop platform. It is not just an impressive exploration of the past, but a living link with the changing face of the country. Asylum seekers living in Rotterdam are invited to take part in Fenix's activities. Thousands have been housed by authorities just a few kilometres west of the museum, on cruise ships that are increasingly used as a temporary housing solution because of a shortage of shelters on land. On Tuesday nights, a group of seven volunteer cooks, mostly women, serve food to up to 50 people who pay €5 for a meal. Recent dishes included Syrian mloukhieh, Yemeni mandi and Turkish kebab. Organisers hope to invite asylum seekers from the nearby ships to join its dinners. 'It's about practising Dutch but also learning to talk about who you are,' said Lai Chee Chiu, who co-ordinates the dinners through non-profit organisation Mano. Tala, a 31-year-old Syrian refugee who volunteers alongside the cooks, said her overall experience of Rotterdam has been positive. 'The group likes cooking and wants to integrate,' she said. Tala recently moved into her own apartment after living for more than a year on a cruise ship moored on the river Maas. 'The help we get in Rotterdam is unlike anything I've experienced before.' The museum's location – facing the former headquarters of the Holland America Line shipping company, where hundreds of thousands of Europeans once boarded ships bound for North America – serves as a reminder that the Dutch were once migrants, too. Common experience A labyrinth of more than 2,000 suitcases with the individual stories of their owners forms an exhibit at the museum. The oldest piece dates from 1898 and began its journey to the Netherlands aboard the Trans-Siberian Railway. Some are happy stories. Others document colonialism, exile and loss. 'I can assure you, there's a migration story to tell in every family. What we need in these times is empathy,' Fenix director Anne Kremers told The National. 'I really hope that after visiting the exhibitions the visitors feel like: 'OK, this is also about me.'' Admiring the views over the Maas river during a recent visit was Jantine, a 23-year-old Dutch music teacher. She said she felt more understanding for migrants after viewing a photo exhibit. 'You see emotions like happiness, fear or sadness. You feel yourself reflected in their eyes,' Jantine said. 'Just showing those pictures is very political, but they also don't tell you what side you should choose.' Behind the suitcases, the wall features a timeline with glimpses of Rotterdam's history. They go all the way back to the arrival in 1583, as a Protestant refugee, of Johan van der Veeken, a merchant and owner of slave ships, who later became the second richest person in the country. On the first floor, a fishing boat used in 2022 by migrants to cross the Mediterranean Sea to Italy stands next to a child's drawing of the Saint Louis, a ship that carried Jewish refugees in 1939 and was turned away from North America. About 239 of its 937 passengers died in the Holocaust. The museum, which is free for locals, does not aim to lecture visitors, Ms Kremers said. 'We could tell you what you should think, but it will stick with you if you experience the museum,' she said. 'History repeats itself. That's what we want to share.' Today, the central Mediterranean route via Italy has become the deadliest migration crossing in the world, with 2,500 recorded deaths or disappearances in 2023. The Dutch government collapsed in May for the second time in two years over migration after Mr Wilders issued a 10-point list of demands deemed impossible to implement. Among them: the deportation of 60,000 Syrians with residence permits. New elections have been scheduled for October. Showcasing migration as a human experience common to everyone may not explicitly address the continuing Dutch political debate on migration, but the national context is important. For the museum, direct involvement with the local community is essential. 'We think that is very important that migration is not just a story that you read about in a museum,' Ms Kremers said. 'To us, it's very important that communities in the city also have this stage to share their national holidays, their memorial days, and sometimes just their story by cooking and sharing a dinner.' The museum is an initiative of the Droom en Daad foundation, whose director Wim Pijbes used to head the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Work please Opening a museum on migration in a country increasingly hostile to the idea is a bold move that offers an alternative to the polarised political debate, said Saskia Bonjour, an associate professor in political science at the University of Amsterdam who specialises in migration. 'It's probably not a coincidence that they chose the artistic road, in which they can convey ideas without being explicit, rather than the historical or pedagogical road,' Ms Bonjour said. 'In mainstream culture, the dominant discourse is that migration is bad. National self-identification with openness and tolerance is gone.' For asylum seekers themselves, national politics feel distant, but the consequences are deeply personal. Living on a Rotterdam cruise ship is part of an application process that can take months or even years. While they wait, many migrants work by delivering food by bicycle. They bristle at their portrayal by far-right politicians as coming to the Netherlands to live off the state. 'We are here to work. We are not here to live off aid,' said Haitham, 30, from Syria. An Arabic teacher, he cannot teach without being fluent in Dutch, but also has no access to free Dutch classes because he is older than the age limit of 25. They all dispute Mr Wilders's claims that Syria is safe to return to following the fall of the Assad regime. 'He should read the reports,' said Haitham, citing recent killings. These include the deaths in March of nearly 1,500 people at the hands of groups linked to the Syrian government. Last month, more than 1,300 people died in southern Syria in clashes between Druze fighters, tribal groups and government forces. Standing beside Haitham, a Kurdish Syrian man in his thirties who did not give his name said he hopes to reunite with his wife and three children in Turkey. 'I came here to feel like I'm treated like a human being,' he said. Yet even among Fenix's most empathetic visitors, there is little awareness that the Dutch may have experienced similar feelings, albeit in a different historical context. 'It doesn't relate to me on a personal level at all, because I don't really have migration in my family,' said Jantine, a Rotterdam resident. 'I don't know if I'm the right audience, because I already think that immigrants should be welcomed.' Asked if the museum might change minds, she was uncertain. 'I don't know if it gets a lot of visitors on the other side of the political spectrum,' she said. 'When I look around, I think there's a lot of really tolerant people already.' Back outside, Joost acknowledged that migration is a difficult conversation as he snapped a picture of the former Holland America building opposite, now a hotel. 'You can see that here in Rotterdam, there are so many people living from so many nationalities. On the one hand, it's perfect. At the same time, it's a problem for a lot of people,' he said. 'We wanted to be a country of tolerance and openness, but now populists say we must protect our prosperity.' Still, many believe that Rotterdam's multicultural past, and future, will endure. 'There is place for everyone,' said Mano's Ms Chiu. 'But nobody knows what the future will look like.'

European shares slide to 4-week lows as US slaps tariffs on dozens of countries
European shares slide to 4-week lows as US slaps tariffs on dozens of countries

Zawya

time21 hours ago

  • Zawya

European shares slide to 4-week lows as US slaps tariffs on dozens of countries

European stocks hit a 4-week low on Friday at the end of a busy week as investors worried about the impact of fresh U.S. levies on dozens of countries, including a 39% tariff on Switzerland. Trump continued his tariff blitz, announcing steep levies on exports from dozens of trading partners including Canada, Brazil, India and Taiwan with countries not listed subject to a base 10% rate ahead of a Friday trade deal deadline. Healthcare stocks dropped 1.6% after U.S. President Donald Trump sent letters to the leaders of 17 major pharmaceutical companies, including Novo Nordisk and Sanofi, outlining how they should slash U.S. prescription drug prices. Denmark-listed Novo Nordisk shed 4.9%, falling to an almost four-year low. Shares of the Wegovy-maker are also set for the steepest-ever weekly fall. "Trump is trying to force these foreign companies to reduce the cost of drugs and medicines exported to the U.S. in order to balance the cuts in subsidies with the big beautiful bill," said Mabrouk Chetouane, head of Global Market Strategy at Nataxis Investment Managers. "I think the pressure will be extremely strong on the healthcare sector because the U.S. is clearly one of the markets where margins are quite significant." The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 1.3% by 0915 GMT, down for the third straight session and on track to end the week in the red. The benchmark index has slipped 4.4% from its March peak, after coming within 2% of that level earlier this week, dragged down by a record plunge in Novo Nordisk shares following a profit warning, and as investors assess the implications of the U.S.-EU trade deal. Germany's blue-chip DAX shed 1.7%, while Denmark's OMXC fell 3% to a nearly two-year low. Most regional bourses were in the red. Stock markets in Switzerland were shut for a holiday. Among individual stocks, Italy's Campari was the top gainer on the STOXX 600 index, adding 6.7% after reporting an increase in second-quarter operating profit. UK's Melrose Industries' shares rose 6.4% and ranked among the top gainers after the defense company beat analysts' operating profit expectations on strong demand. British Airways owner IAG shares dropped 1.8% after rising in early trade on quarterly earnings, after the airline group said it expected a slight rise in costs linked to air traffic control issues. A latest survey showed euro zone manufacturing moved closer to stabilization in July, giving further credence to European Central Bank's modestly upbeat assessment of the economy last week. Eyes will be on U.S. payrolls data slated for later in the day after euro zone inflation held steady at ECB's 2% target in July. Investors have pared bets on ECB rate cuts, placing only a 44% chance of another quarter-point move by December. (Reporting by Twesha Dikshit and Medha Singh; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Shinjini Ganguli)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store