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Cyrille Tchatchet: “My trajectory in weightlifting and in life can be useful at the WADA Athlete Council”

His life could be a book, but it almost became a movie. When presenting the Paris 2024 Olympic Refugee Team, the International Olympic Committee produced an inspiring documentary about the journey of these athletes before and during the Tokyo 2020ne Games. One of the profiled stars was Cyrille Tchatchet, born and raised in Cameroon, then a refugee in England, and now already a British citizen. He is in Manama, Bahrein, and will be an active spectator of the IWF World Championships starting this Friday. At the same time, we will also campaign for his most recent endeavour – the candidature to a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) Athlete Council membership. “The idea of weightlifting came at a cousin’s baptism, while in Cameroon. During the celebration, I saw a picture of his father (my uncle), a lifter, and I liked that image so much that I decided I would also try,” recalls Cyrille, also an IWF Athlete Commission member. “But, back then – I was only 14 -, there weren’t many conditions to practice the sport. I was nevertheless strong – in the space of few months, I could snatch 70kg… - and I started to get some encouraging results, both on a local and national level”. Cyrille Tchatchet: "Weightlifting is now a credible sport!" That is when his life changed forever. In 2014, at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, he competes for his country, but never returns home. “I felt it wasn’t safe any longer to come back. With the distance and time, I think the decision was taken too much in a hurry, without really thinking about the consequences”. And those challenges were huge. “I had no acquaintances in the UK, no family, no friends, nothing. I ended up living in the street, and then being detained in many immigration centres. In one of these places, there was a club and could eventually train… That saved me, but I went through a very painful personal experience, mainly from a psychological point of view,” Cyrille admits. In 2016, he finally gets his asylum request accepted and he enters university to conclude his studies. He always wanted to be a nurse and got specialised in mental health care, which is now his main job. “While enduring my difficult experience, I always had people that helped me, so I felt that I wanted also to assist others”. In parallel, with a new status and residing in the UK, he could eventually get a membership to compete at British Weightlifting events. Which he did, with remarkable success. In 2018, his efforts paid off, and he was offered an IOC scholarship – that would be the first step into getting his place in the Olympic Refugee Team. 2020 meant a worldwide COVID pandemic and the Tokyo Games had to be postponed. “To be honest, it served quite well my interests. I got a hip injury by that time and the additional year to the Olympics was precious to fully recover,” Cyrille recalls. When the team is formalised, he learns with joy that he will be in the Japanese capital, lifting in the most important sports event on the planet. “It was surreal, a kind of dream. Every athlete trains with the ultimate goal of being at the Olympics, but given my history and the complicated circumstances I lived in, it was quite unthinkable to envisage Olympic participation. But I was there, and it was great, despite the limitations related to COVID. The competition day arrived and I did 155-195, which was a bit below my best expectations, but still quite good taking into account my injury. Moreover, in the snatch part, I had a problem with my elbow, so I couldn’t make the clean and jerk in the best possible conditions”. Competing at the Tokyo Olympic Games After Tokyo, and already with a university degree in the pocket, Cyrille starts working as a mental health nurse in the community, alternating his activities between a medical structure and home visits to patients needing his assistance. On the sports side, he continues to train and competes in the 2022 Commonwealth Games, where he lifts a very good snatch of 158kg, but then misses the clean and jerk part. At the 2023 Europeans, he is fourth (156-194-350) in the 96kg bodyweight category. “My goal is to compete at the 2026 Commonwealth Games and earn a medal there. As they are also in Glasgow, it would be a good way to close somehow the circle since 2014,” he admits. "It is important that our voice and representation became stronger" Proposed by the Chair of the IWF Athletes Commission Forrester Osei, on behalf of our International Federation, to a membership position in the WADA Athlete Council, Cyrille sincerely thinks he has the legitimacy to advocate for it: “In recent years, there was a profound change of culture in weightlifting. The dark period we endured in the past, namely related to doping cases, is now closed. Our sport became credible and our athletes feel that they can enter into an event and compete fairly with the others,” Cyrille explains. Moreover, working in the health industry, the successful lifter also believes that he can bring an added-value to the WADA Council. “The athletes’ voice and representation have become stronger over the years. This is important. With my background both in terms of mental health, and also in elite sport, I think I can combine that for the benefit of the WADA. The circumstances of my life made me a strong and resilient person, not only in competition, but also off the platform. This is important for any job or endeavour you take in your life!” Cyrille concludes. Pedro AdregaIWF Communications

IWF to partner with SBD in landmark 8-year agreement

The IWF is thrilled to announce an 8-year partnership with SBD, a leading global sports brand, designing and manufacturing technical clothing, supports and accessories. This partnership aims to elevate the profile of weightlifting on all five continents through innovative projects and initiatives designed to enhance awareness and foster a positive perception of the sport. IWF with SBD: From left to right: Forrester Osei (IWF Athletes Commission chair), Matthew Curtain (IWF EB member and British Weightlifting CEO), Mohammed Jalood (IWF President), Benjamin Banks (SBD CEO), William Islip (SBD Commercial Director) and Antonio Urso (IWF General Secretary) With a shared vision to develop weightlifting at all levels, this collaboration will focus on grassroots growth, sport development, and athlete support. The agreement also highlights a strong commitment to promoting inclusion, ensuring the sport remains accessible and welcoming to participants of all backgrounds. IWF President, Mohammed Jalood stated: "This partnership with SBD marks a significant milestone in the evolution of our sport. Together, we are committed to creating opportunities and building a sustainable future for weightlifting around the world." SBD representatives (William Islip and Benjamin Banks) presenting the IWF-SBD partnership at the IWF Congress in Manama (BRN) SBD CEO, Benjamin Banks considered: “We are delighted to enter into a long-term partnership with the IWF. This is a very exciting opportunity for us to establish our business within weightlifting, as it will enable us to enhance our offering to sponsored athletes, coaches and our customer base across the globe, whilst supporting the IWF’s long term objectives.” Further details about this transformative collaboration will be unveiled in the coming months. IWF

IWF Congress approves in Manama (BRN) amendments to the IWF Constitution

The IWF Congress, gathering representatives of 135 National Member Federations approved today in Manama (BRN), several amendments to the IWF Constitution, thus leading also to the validation of the IWF By-Laws, approved by the IWF Executive Board last November 25. Both documents will enter into effect from tomorrow, December 5, 2024. In his welcome speech, the IWF President Mohammed Jalood expressed his gratitude to the Bahrain authorities for their hospitality and the excellent preparation for the 2024 IWF World Championships, from December 5-15. “We will experience a great time here in Manama and the entire IWF family feels at home in Bahrain. I am sure that exciting performances will be produced here, namely many new World Records,” declared Mr Jalood. “This Congress is held in a time of great unity within our International Federation and this is leading to enormous progress. The Paris 2024 Olympic Games were a great success – moreover, we are happy to report that we didn’t have any positive doping tests! – and these achievements greatly help our Sport to secure its presence in the Olympic programme,” concluded the IWF President. IWF President Mohammed Jalood With delegates of 93 national bodies present in person in the capital of Bahrain and another 42 connecting with the assembly online, the new IWF Constitution was approved with 134 votes in favour and only one vote against. The changes voted by the delegates do not alter the document's substance, whose last update was made in September 2023. They are essentially aimed at providing a simpler language, to remove redundant provisions and details not belonging to a constitutional text. Four new modifications were however made: 1. Conditions for IWF Membership (Article 6); 2. Time limit for payment of outstanding amounts by MFs (Article 11); 3. Composition of the Executive Board (Article 16); 4. Two changes in the eligibility criteria (Article 25). On the side of the IWF By-Laws, they now incorporate large sections of the former Constitution, namely related to operational and technical provisions in the ‘Schedules’ sections. After this important vote, the Congress proceeded with the presentation of the various IWF Committees and Commissions reports (who had already made successful presentations to the IWF Executive Board on December 3). IWF Athletes Commission Chair Forrester Osei IWF commercial partners (Eleiko, ZKC, Uekasa, and SBD) were next on the programme, and the presentations’ time came to an end with the update of the IWF upcoming competitions, namely the 2025 World Junior and Youth World Championships in Lima (PER), and the 2025, 2026 and 2027 IWF World Championships, respectively in Forde (NOR), Ningbo (CHN) and Yerevan (ARM). The IWF Congress concluded with the grant of IWF awards for their contribution to weightlifting to: Michel Raynaud (FRA, Merit Certificate), Waldemar Gospodarek (POL, Gold Collar), Taisto Kuppola (FIN, Gold Collar), Stian Grimseth (NOR, Gold Collar), Karl Rimböck (GER, IWF Hall of Fame induction) and David Montero (BRA, IWF Hall of Fame induction). After intense days of meetings, the IWF family will gather this Thursday for the Opening Ceremony of the 2024 IWF World Championships in Manama, and on Friday for the first day of the competition. IWF Communications Photos by Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia For more Congress photos, please visit our Gallery here

IWF Executive Board meeting in Manama (BRN), December 2-3: main decisions

Under the leadership of the IWF President Mohammed Jalood, the IWF Executive Board (EB) met on December 2-3 in Manama (BRN), some days before the start of the 2024 edition of the IWF World Championships. During the two-day gathering, the main decisions of the EB were: - Allocation, for the first time in history, of both the IWF World Junior and World Youth Championships to the same city, running simultaneously. The 2025 edition of both competitions will take place in Lima (PER), from April 30 to May 6. As with the 2024 IWF World Youth Championships, also held in the Peruvian capital, two platforms will be used at the same time during the event; - Approval of an increased level of partnership with the company SBD, producing sports apparel for the strength industry. Under this agreement, the Sheffield-based company will be IWF’s privileged partner in this area for the next eight years. SBD had already partnered with our International Federation at the IWF World Cup last April and will be again present at the IWF World Championships in Manama; - Validation of the continental IWF training centres/academies: Africa (Egypt), Americas (La Havana, CUB), Asia (Fuzhou, CHN), Europe (Baku, AZE), and Oceania (Samoa). This project, starting in 2025, will allow the preparation, education, and training of lifters and coaches in those locations in each of the continents; - Approval of the IWF Innovation Commission proposal to introduce new bodyweight categories, from June 2025. In the men’s competition, they will be: 60kg, 65kg, 71kg, 79kg, 88kg, 98kg, 110kg, +110kg. Among women, the new categories are: 48kg, 53kg, 58kg, 63kg, 69kg, 77kg, 86kg, +86kg; - Acknowledgement of the encouraging strategy related to the IWF anti-doping programme, after the presentation of the most recent reports by Benjamin Cohen, International Testing Agency (ITA) Director General, and Rune Andersen, Chair of the IWF Anti-Doping Commission. The agreement between both entities was re-confirmed and extended for the period 2025-2028;   - Update on the excellent preparation for the 2026 IWF World Championships, taking place in Ningbo (CHN); - Praise of the IWF Athletes Commission report, suggesting several new initiatives to facilitate the comprehension and access of the lifters to the IWF information and documentation; - Confirmation of the IWF Refugee Team programme for 2025, after a successful project in 2023 and 2024; - Definition of the procedures concerning the establishment of the IWF Coaching Licence, starting in 2025; - Increase of the amount to be allocated to the IWF Development Programme in 2025. This sum will now be of US$ 850’000, to be distributed to national federations; The IWF established a 8-year partnership with SBD - Approval of the principles concerning the establishment of an updated procedure for the IWF Partnership and Licensing programme;  - Definition of the dates for the election of the IWF President and Executive Board: May 23-26, 2025 (location to be confirmed); - The EB also finalised the voting procedure for the IWF Ordinary Congress, to be held in Manama (BRN) on December 4, 2024. This assembly will namely update the IWF Constitution. IWF

IWF Refugee Team: ready for great performances in Manama!

After its creation in 2023, the IWF Refugee Team will be represented by four athletes in the upcoming IWF World Championships, starting this Friday in Manama (BRN). The group arrived in Bahrain’s capital one week ago for a training camp in the facilities that will be used for the IWF showcase. Coached by Aveenash Pandoo, Yekta Jamali (W81), Ramiro Mora (M96), Aline de Souza (W55) and Addriel Garcia (M81) are ready to shine and hopefully improve their personal bests. “The preparation is going very well and they all look very strong. Taking part in this important competition, the World Championships, is a huge inspiration for them. None of the four athletes present here have injuries, so everything is set for good performances,” considers Aveenash, supervising the team’s training today in Manama. Addriel Garcia (right) training today in Manama The first participation of the Refugee Team in an IWF event occurred in September 2023, at the World Championships in Riyadh. “Back then, we had many challenges with the visas and only two lifters could travel to Saudi Arabia – Aline and Monique Araujo. Here, with the immense help of the local authorities, led by the chair of the Bahrain Weightlifting Federation Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq, we managed to overcome that problem. I also thank Florian Sperl, IWF EB Member and director of our project, the IWF staff, and our physiotherapist Hussein Settawi,” explains the coach. Araujo is the only absent for the 2024 edition of the event, after suffering from an injury in the last months. Reflecting on the importance of the training camp in Manama, Aveenash is clear: “If you look at the dynamics of the Refugee Team, we are all located in different countries and parts of the world, so being together well in advance before the World Championships and being able to train in these amazing facilities, this is hugely positive. It was also for me a privilege, as a coach, to see them and co-ordinate the last stage of their preparation before the event”. Ramiro Mora at the Paris 2024 Olympics From the group of four athletes in Bahrain, Jamali and Mora have also Olympic experience, after being part of the Olympic Refugee Team at the Paris 2024 Games. In the women’s 81kg, the Iranian native did a personal best of 103-128-231 (ninth place) and less than two months later at the IWF World Junior Championships in Leon (ESP) she did the same total (104-127) and got the bronze medal. Born in 2004, this is her last appearance as a junior athlete. For Bahrain, she has an entry total of 240kg. Mora did slightly best in the French capital lifting 166-210-376 (seventh place) in the men’s 102kg. Originally from Cuba, he is changing the bodyweight category in Manama, but is clearly aiming for a podium presence. “I will try to go for a medal and approach the 380kg in total, but the competition is very strong. I am competing in Group B and my best chances are in clean and jerk – I did 205kg last week in training and I think the medal will be between 205 and 215kg,” confesses Mora. Aline de Souza lifting at the 2023 IWF Worlds “I would like to thank the IWF for allowing us to be here in this training camp. It has been really important for us. We took maximum advantage of this facility. We are lifting the weight that we potentially target during the competition,” he adds. In Paris, Mora’s total was already an 11kg improvement from his previous personal best. “Since the Olympics, the preparation has been great – I was training primarily in England, but I was able to compete in some events in Germany too. Coming from Paris, I had a three-week break, after a very intense year. But since then, I recovered quite well. After this event in Bahrain, I will focus on the Europeans in 2025”, Mora continues. “The spirit of this team is very good. The coach is also fantastic, always ready to assist us. We have a good communication between us and we are constantly helping each other,” he concludes. The IWF Refugee Team, with coach Aveenash Pandoo (seated) and physio Hussein Settawi (on far right) Aline de Souza was officially the first-ever refugee athlete to lift at an IWF event, last year in Riyadh. Back then, she did 82-100-182 in the women’s 55kg, but she hopes to improve in Bahrain (she entered with a total of 185kg). “We have a lot of support and the level of preparation is excellent. The expectation is always to make better and improve the performances we did last year. We are all very optimistic about a good result – I personally also believe that I can do a good competition,” the Brazilian native admits. Yekta Jamali at this year's Olympics As a refugee, Addriel Garcia will also have its first IWF competition in Bahrain. But until 2019, he competed under the Cuban flag and his best result at international level is a 155-185-340 in 2016. “They are all relatively young, so their presence here has a great meaning for their competitive future. It’s a fantastic team, with a great camaraderie spirit. They all fit very well together. Ramiro and Yekta are perhaps the two most experienced athletes here. They bring a lot of enthusiasm and encouragement to the team, which is very good,” Aveenash considers. “I’ve been coaching for more than 20 years and I am pretty confident. Moreover, the facilities here are of Olympic Games level, so even for that we have all the conditions to shine,” he concludes. Pedro AdregaIWF

Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq: “To succeed, you need to think outside the box!”

Always serene in his chair, he speaks in a fluent way, without hesitations. He doesn’t take any calls or reply to any messages during the interview. At 33, Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq is about to accomplish the unthinkable: to hold the first-ever World Championship of an Olympic sport in Bahrain. From December 5-15, Manama, the vibrant capital of the kingdom, will welcome the best athletes on the planet in the 2024 edition of the IWF World Championships. Since March 2022 at the helm of the Bahrain Weightlifting Federation, Eshaq – most probably the youngest president of a national federation in the five continents – had a vision: “To really develop weightlifting in Bahrain, to be present in the Olympic Games, to host international major events, and to attract some of the most inspiring athletes to train and compete for our country”. Less than three years later, the young leader can proudly say he ticked all the boxes. “We started with the Asian Weightlifting Championships in 2022, and thanks to the effort of the team and the support of the government and the Olympic Committee, it was an astounding success”. Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq: "We want to organise the best World Championships ever!" From that moment on, it became evident that the country was ready to raise the bar. “When the opportunity came in 2023 to host the world event, we jumped in. Never before has this country hosted a senior World Championship of an Olympic sport. So, we said: we must go for it,” Eshaq recalls. After a successful presentation of the bid to the IWF Executive Board in June 2023, Bahrain was given “the blessing and the confidence” to host our International Federation’s showcase in this month of December. “Now, we cannot let them down and we must organise the best World Championships ever!” Leading a meeting of the 2024 IWF World Championships Organising Committee The unprecedented experience all the participants will certainly feel starts from the venue itself: three temporary tents erected where two months ago there was only sand. “Sometimes you need to take risks to succeed. People were telling me ‘You’re crazy’. We were here in the first week of October and we had not hit the ground! But we wanted a plot that was centrally located, so that the logistical operations (transport and accommodation for example) could be easier to manage. We finally found it, but I had many sleepless nights because two months before the event we were still on the sand. But with the support we received and the great team we have we were able to liaise with all governmental entities to first asphalt the land and then install the tents. It has been a huge challenge, but when you see the result now, all that worry was definitively compensated”. During the Championships, Eshaq also intends to provide an unforgettable 10 days of competition for the athletes, coaches, officials, and spectators attending the event. Innovations in the sports presentation, TV production, lighting of the venue, and WR recognition are some of the novelties that will be presented in Manama. “Since June 2023 until now, every day I am thinking about these Championships. Every day, we have been brainstorming about it. You only get to host a World Championships once in a lifetime. I am happy we got this opportunity, so I said from the beginning that we need to make it special. We wanted to do things that hadn’t been done in previous editions of the Championships. Nothing is always perfect and mistakes can happen but we are really striving for excellence during this competition. We wanted basically to develop an athlete-centric approach!” Checking the security aspects of the Championships' venue With a holistic view of the development of the sport, the Bahraini leader is clear: “The results should not only be on the platform, but also off the platform. To achieve the best, we must think outside the box”. The 2024 IWF World Championships are the corollary of an intense work and effort that led to the presence of two athletes from Bahrain at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, and even more importantly, the first medal ever for the country in weightlifting. Gor Minasyan earned bronze in the men’s +102kg and secured a place in the pantheon of great athletes in Bahrain. “By God’s grace, we were very happy to achieve this medal. It was a rollercoaster time in Paris – we started in the men’s 102kg with Lesman Montano. He was so close, but then missed out and finished sixth. But he was the first-ever lifter from Bahrain in the Olympics. And then we had Gor who put in on a fantastic performance – bronze medal and heaviest snatch. He became the first male medallist for Bahrain in the history of the Games and his success was also the first one outside the sport of athletics,” Eshaq underlines.   After this unparalleled achievement, the weightlifting family in the nation had a solid ground “to lobby for even more”. The Bahrain Olympic Committee and the General Sports Authority have been pivotal in this development and were firmly behind the organisation of the IWF World Championships. “We wouldn’t be able to achieve what we achieved without this huge support, with no limitations. We have also a very dedicated and enthusiastic team, without whom this competition wouldn’t be a reality. In total we are 70/80 people, including volunteers and some experts in the set-up of previous IWF major events,” Eshaq explains. With Gor Minasyan The impact of this rapid progress is also reflected in the number of active athletes in the country – presently around 50, including men and women. “In 10 years, this number can be 500. Short-term goals were relatively easy to reach, but long-term ones – related to grassroots – will demand more time, effort, and resources. But all these positive achievements create an immense awareness around the sport and inspire a new generation of young lifters”. At the last IWF World Junior Championships in Leon, Bahrain had two athletes competing in Spain. “This is a new and extremely good situation for us!” With some days to go before the start of the IWF major event, Eshaq remains optimistic about the prospect of a first medal ever in a senior World Championships on home soil for one of Bahrain’s lifters. “This would definitively be amazing!” For the time being, this huge organisation is already a strong asset in the nation’s portfolio to keep hosting major international competitions, s sports industry strategy that complements the one already put in place by the country’s authorities in the tourism sector. “Bahrain has always been a welcoming place, with a lot of history and culture. Combining that with the field of sports is the way to go”. On December 16, when the majority of the participating teams will be returning home, Eshaq will not rest on his laurels. “The work is far from being finished. Next step: Los Angeles 2028. We want to be at those Olympics and be successful there!” Pedro AdregaIWF Communications