News and Media

Archive from 2014

WADA makes amendment to Section S.2.1 of 2014 Prohibited List

Montreal, May 30, 2014 Dear Colleagues, WADA has confirmed an amendment to Section S2.1 of the 2014 List of Prohibited Substances and Methods. Hypoxia-Inducible Factor (HIF) activators Xenon and Argon will be added to the 2014 Prohibited List, after the recommendation was made and approved by WADA’s Executive Committee during its May meeting. Having recently been alerted to the substance of Xenon and its potential performance enhancing characteristics, the WADA List Committee discussed the matter during its April meeting and recommended namely adding the two noble gases – Xenon and argon – on the Prohibited List. The change will be effective following the required three-month notice period, and once UNESCO has appropriately communicated the amendment to all States Parties. The revised 2014 Prohibited List will take effect on September 1, 2014. The change to the List reads as follows: S2. PEPTIDE HORMONES, GROWTH FACTORS AND RELATED SUBSTANCES The following substances, and other substances with similar chemical structure or similar biological effect(s), are prohibited: 1. Erythropoiesis-Stimulating Agents [e.g. erythropoietin (EPO), darbepoetin (dEPO), hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) stabilizers and activators (e.g. xenon, argon), methoxy polyethylene glycol-epoetin beta (CERA), peginesatide (Hematide)]. The revised 2014 Prohibited List can be found on WADA’s website. Best regards, World Anti-Doping

Reminder: 2014 Junior World Championships Kazan

The deadline for the Final Entry Forms for the 2014 IWF Junior World Championships Kazan expires on 5 June. We invite all Member Federations to send their Final Entry Forms promptly to the Russian Weightlifting Federation ([email protected]) and to the IWF ([email protected]). We kindly ask you to indicate your participation at the IWF Congress to be held in Kazan prior to the competitions. All documents and forms are available on the IWF

YOG qualification competitions concluded in Oceania

With the +94kg competition on the Youth Oceania Championships in Mont Dore, NCL, the YOG qualification competitions concluded for the 2nd Youth Olympic Games to be organized in Nanjing, China. The race started last year with the 2013 Youth World Championships in Tashkent, UZB where 16 NOCs qualified with 25 men athletes and 15 NOCs with 22 women athletes. In 2014 all five Continents organized qualification events in Bangsaen, THA, Tunis, TUN, Lima, PER, Ciechanow, POL and Mont Dore, NCL respectively where additional 22 NOCs qualified with 22 men athletes and 17 NOCs with 17 women athletes. Thanks to the thoroughly elaborated Qualification Regulation, wide representation is ensured from all 5 Continents. Considering the Universality places, Host Country representation and possible reallocation, we expect more than 60 NOCs to take part in the weightlifting competitions of the 2nd Youth Olympic Games in

UAE NOC agrees to set up weightlifting centre

Dubai: The UAE National Olympic Committee (UAE NOC) has agreed in principle to set up a specialised training centre for weightlifting in the country. The governing body for sports in the UAE, which met this week following the conclusion of the second UAE School Olympic Games, agreed that the UAE needs a specialised centre to tap the huge potential of its athletes. The weightlifting agreements was one of the announcements made at the end of the UAE NOC’s annual meeting of all sports associations and federations at the Jumeirah Emirates Towers hotel late on Wednesday. As per the Emirates Weightlifting Federation’s (EWF) proposal, the training centre will have separate facilities for boys and girls in all age categories. The UAE NOC board of directors earmarked a financial package for the same in its annual budget. “Such a specialised centre is very much the need of the hour for an ambitious sports nation like the UAE,” Faisal Al Hammadi, General Secretary of the EWF, told Gulf News. “Weightlifting is one of the basic sporting disciplines that are essential in the formation of sportspersons. While body agility and muscle control can come from being involved in gymnastics, body strength can be obtained from weightlifting. So we need this centre as soon as possible and, once it comes up, it will be a dream come true for all sportspersons in the UAE.” Approval for a new centre could not have come at a better time, as Al Shabab Club has already requested the EWF to vacate its temporary premises. “For the time being we have managed to move to Salahuddin Hall, but we need a permanent place where our athletes can practice on a regular basis,” Al Hammadi said. “Weightlifting is an Olympic sport capable of bringing in medals for the UAE and we should have been paying attention to this long back. But it’s never too late.” Earlier, Abdul Rahman Mohammad Al Owais, Minister of Health, accepted an invitation from Prince Nawaf Bin Faisal to attend the GCC Games in Saudi Arabia in 2015. Source:

Oceania Weightlifting Championships a strong indicator for Glasgow

The Oceania Weightlifting Championships get underway in New Caledonia today with a new generation of young lifters ready to reaffirm their promise ahead of the Commonwealth Games in July. Five Pacific lifters won gold medals at the Commonwealth Championships in November including Samoa's Mary Opeloge, the younger sister of Delhi 2010 gold medalists Ele and Niusila Opeloge. The General Secretary of the Oceania Weightlifting Association, Paul Coffa, believes as many as six lifters are in line to win gold medals in Glasgow, with Papua New Guinea's stable looking particularly strong. "One is Steven Kari, 21 year old, the other one is Dika Toua. She won a silver in 2006, she didn't compete in 2010 - she was married having children - and she's making a comeback. She's ranking number one in the 53 [kilogram class]. We have also the 62 kilo class for men that's really something. That's possibly the highlight of the Commonwealth Games in weightlifting to have Lapua Lapua from Tuvalu is ranking number one, so is Nevo Ioane from Samoa equal on that and we have the young Morea Baru from Papua New Guinea, so we've got medals in there for the Pacific to grab. David Katoatau in the 105 kilos and Tovia Opeloge from Samoa so we've got another chance for gold in there so we are really looking well for the Commonwealth, no question on that". The Oceania Championships is also a qualifier for the Youth Olympic Games in China.