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India Tops Global Doping Violations List for 2023 with 214 Cases, Govt Moves to Amend …

India has topped the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) global doping violations list for 2023, registering 214 Adverse Analytical Findings (AAFs) from 5,606 samples a positivity rate of 3.8%, the highest among countries with over 1,000 tests. This troubling development has sparked concern among athletes, officials, and sports fans, prompting the Ministry of Youth Affairs and […]

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India Tops Global Doping Violations List for 2023 with 214 Cases, Govt Moves to Amend ...

India has topped the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) global doping violations list for 2023, registering 214 Adverse Analytical Findings (AAFs) from 5,606 samples a positivity rate of 3.8%, the highest among countries with over 1,000 tests.

This troubling development has sparked concern among athletes, officials, and sports fans, prompting the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports to announce a renewed crackdown on doping. The government is set to amend the National Anti-Doping Bill and ramp up testing and awareness campaigns in a bid to restore the integrity of Indian sports.

India’s Doping Challenge: Numbers, Reactions, and Human Impact

According to WADA’s 2023 report, India surpassed nations like China, the USA, France, Germany, and Russia in doping violations, with 214 positive cases detected. Of the 5,606 samples collected, nearly half were during competitions, and the 3.8% positivity rate is significantly higher than China’s 0.2% and the USA’s 1.0%.

The National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) has increased its testing efforts, collecting more samples than ever before. “Any amount of doping is unacceptable but we have to acknowledge that our testing is vigorous and with every year the sample size is increasing.

With our aggressive awareness campaigns, we intend to bring the numbers down in the next two years,” a Sports Ministry official told the media. Many athletes, meanwhile, have voiced frustration that the actions of a few are tarnishing the hard-earned reputations of the wider sporting community.

The news has also led to calls for better education and support for young and grassroots athletes, who are often most vulnerable to inadvertent violations.

Policy Overhaul: Legislative Changes and New Initiatives

In response to the alarming report, the Sports Ministry has revived and amended the National Anti-Doping Bill 2022. The revised legislation, soon to be tabled in Parliament, will drop the criminalisation of athlete involvement with doping syndicates, following WADA’s objections.

The proposed National Board for Anti-Doping in Sports has also been scrapped to avoid excessive government interference. Instead, the focus will shift to stricter penalties, enhanced testing, and robust education for athletes and coaches.

The Ministry is also pushing digital tools like the “Know Your Medicine” app, designed to help athletes check substances and avoid accidental violations. “We are determined to fight doping. It is not acceptable. That’s why we have increased the sample size every year. If you see the result, there is a decline in the rate over the last few years from over 5 per cent to three per cent. We have been transparent in our policy,” a senior official stated.

The government’s multi-pronged approach aims to balance deterrence with education and support, acknowledging that lasting change will require both systemic reform and cultural transformation.

The Logical Indian’s Perspective

India’s repeated appearance at the top of the WADA doping list is a sobering moment for the nation’s sporting community. While stricter enforcement and legislative changes are necessary, the real solution lies in building a culture of integrity, transparency, and empathy.

It is vital to support athletes not just with testing and penalties, but with education, mental health resources, and guidance especially for those at the grassroots who may lack access to information or support. True sporting greatness is rooted in fairness, discipline, and respect for the rules. As a society, how can we collectively support our athletes to compete clean and uphold India’s sporting honour?

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Saturday Special

Today, we’re bringing you the best from the KUOW Newsroom… Travis Decker, a Wenatchee resident and military veteran, is accused of killing his three young daughters outside Wenatchee.  Veterans in the Wenatchee Valley are asking for increased mental health services, to prevent the next tragedy. The small town of Quilcene, tucked away in the Olympic […]

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Saturday Special

Today, we’re bringing you the best from the KUOW Newsroom…

Travis Decker, a Wenatchee resident and military veteran, is accused of killing his three young daughters outside Wenatchee. 

Veterans in the Wenatchee Valley are asking for increased mental health services, to prevent the next tragedy.

The small town of Quilcene, tucked away in the Olympic Peninsula, is being divided by national politics. 

Quilcene is the first school district in Washington to ban trans athletes – even though there are no trans athletes trying to compete.

And for a lot of families, day camps provide critical summer childcare for parents, and a chance for kids to play outdoors and learn new skills. 

But for kids with disabilities, welcoming day camps can be hard to find around Seattle.

We can only make Seattle Now because listeners support us. Tap here to make a gift and keep Seattle Now in your feed.

Got questions about local news or story ideas to share? We want to hear from you! Email us at seattlenow@kuow.org, leave us a voicemail at (206) 616-6746 or leave us feedback online.

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Trump administration investigates Oregon's transgender athlete policies

By MARTHA BELLISLE, Associated Press The Trump administration said Friday it’s investigating the Oregon Department of Education after receiving a complaint from a conservative nonprofit group alleging the state was violating civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams. It’s the latest escalation in the Republican administration’s effort to bar […]

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Trump administration investigates Oregon's transgender athlete policies

By MARTHA BELLISLE, Associated Press

The Trump administration said Friday it’s investigating the Oregon Department of Education after receiving a complaint from a conservative nonprofit group alleging the state was violating civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams.

It’s the latest escalation in the Republican administration’s effort to bar transgender athletes from women’s sports teams nationwide. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in February to block trans girls from participating on sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

The administration says transgender athlete policies violate Title IX, the 1972 federal law that bans discrimination in education based on sex. Proponents of Trump’s ban say it restores fairness in athletic competitions, but opponents say bans are an attack on transgender youth.

The U.S. Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights opened the Oregon investigation based on a complaint by the America First Policy Institute that alleges high-school aged female athletes had lost medals and competitive opportunities to transgender athletes. It follows a probe launched earlier this year into Portland Public Schools and the state’s governing body for high school sports over alleged violations of Title IX for allowing trans girls to compete in girls sports.

Earlier this month, the administration sued the California Department of Education for allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams, alleging the policy violates federal law. Trump also filed a lawsuit in April alleging Maine violated Title IX by allowing trans girls and women to compete against other female athletes.

Oregon law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Craig Trainor said in a release Friday that the administration won’t let educational institutions receive federal funds “to continue trampling upon women’s rights.”

“If Oregon is permitting males to compete in women’s sports, it is allowing these males to steal the accolades and opportunities that female competitors have rightfully earned through hard work and grit, while callously disregarding women’s and girls’ safety, dignity, and privacy,” Trainor said.

Messages seeking comment from the Oregon education officials were not immediately returned.

Nate Lowery, spokesman for the Oregon School Activities Association, said they were reviewing the administration’s notice with its legal counsel and doesn’t have additional comments at this time.

Three high school track-and-field athletes filed a lawsuit against Oregon in early July that seeks to overturn all sports records set by transgender girl athletes and prevent them from participating in girls sporting events.

The complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Oregon alleges the state policy prohibiting schools from excluding student athletes from events that align with their gender identity violates Title IX. The students say it has harmed them through loss of competition, placements, and opportunities to advance to higher-level events.

Jessica Hart Steinmann, executive general counsel at the America First Policy Institute, said the investigation is a step toward restoring equal opportunities for women’s athletics.

“Title IX was meant to protect girls — not to undermine them — and we’re hopeful this signals a return to that original purpose,” Steinmann said in a release.

More than two dozen states have enacted laws barring transgender women and girls from participating in certain sports competitions. Some policies have been blocked in court.

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case over state restrictions on which sports teams transgender athletes can join.

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Judge stays execution to evaluate if Alabama inmate is competent

A state judge has stayed an upcoming execution in Alabama to evaluate whether the man is too mentally ill to be put to death. The judge temporarily stayed the Aug. 21 execution of David Lee Roberts until it can be established whether he has a “rational understanding” of what is to happen to him. “Or […]

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Judge stays execution to evaluate if Alabama inmate is competent

A state judge has stayed an upcoming execution in Alabama to evaluate whether the man is too mentally ill to be put to death.

The judge temporarily stayed the Aug. 21 execution of David Lee Roberts until it can be established whether he has a “rational understanding” of what is to happen to him.

“Or similarly put, the issue is whether the petitioner’s concept of reality is so impaired that he cannot grasp the execution’s meaning and the purpose or the link between his crime and its punishment,” Marion County Circuit Judge Talmage Lee Carter wrote in the July 10 order.

Carter said the execution will be on hold until a report from the Alabama Department of Mental Health is finished. It is not immediately clear how long that will take.

Roberts was convicted of killing Annetra Jones in 1992 by shooting her in the head. His execution was scheduled to be carried out by nitrogen gas, a method Alabama began using last year.

Attorneys representing Roberts argue that his death sentence should be suspended due to severe illness. Roberts has been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia diagnosis, hears voices and is delusional, they said in a court filing. He also recently attempted to burn tattoos off his arm and leg because he believed they “are trying to control his thoughts,” his lawyers said.

“This evidence demonstrates Mr. Roberts is incompetent to be executed because his delusions prevent him from having a factual or rational understanding of the reason,” they said.

The Alabama attorney general’s office is not appealing the stay. The state asked that the competency evaluation by expedited.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states cannot execute prisoners who are insane and do not understand their impending execution and the reasons for it. However state law does not provide a clear standard on what courts must find in determining someone’s competency to be executed.

In 1992, Roberts, now 59, was a houseguest at Jones’ boyfriend’s home in Marion County. Prosecutors said that on the afternoon of April 22, he came to the home, packed his belongings, stole money and shot Jones three times in the head with a .22 caliber rifle while she slept on the couch. He then set the house on fire after dousing Jones’ body and the floor with a flammable liquid, prosecutors said.

Jurors convicted Roberts of capital murder and voted 7-5 to recommend that he receive life in prison without parole. A judge overrode that and sentenced him to death. Alabama no longer allows judges to override jury sentences in capital cases.

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Why record

By Issy Ronald, CNN (CNN) — For all Abdelrahman Elaraby’s success as an athlete, swimming is a passion simultaneously pursued intensely and held at arm’s length. “You’ll never find me talking about swimming outside the pool,” the 25-year-old Egyptian told CNN Sports. Few people even knew that he had broken the African record in the […]

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Why record

By Issy Ronald, CNN

(CNN) — For all Abdelrahman Elaraby’s success as an athlete, swimming is a passion simultaneously pursued intensely and held at arm’s length.

“You’ll never find me talking about swimming outside the pool,” the 25-year-old Egyptian told CNN Sports.

Few people even knew that he had broken the African record in the men’s 50m butterfly in Monaco in May until the news was shared publicly. When one of his friends checked to make sure he was OK after not hearing from him for a few days, Elaraby simply responded, “‘Yeah man, I just … became the fastest African in history so I feel great.’

“And he was like … ‘How did you not tell anybody?’” Elaraby recalled.

For him, focusing on life outside swimming is just as important as his goals in the sport. There is time for training in the pool and at the gym, “and then outside that we can find some other stuff to do,” he added. “I’m very family-oriented … I read, I journal, I could go crazy if I leave my house without journaling in the morning or praying or reading the Quran.”

Still, even as the fifth fastest man in the world this year over his preferred distance – the 50m butterfly – Elaraby prefers not to think about swimming as a career, wary of the trap he fell into earlier in his life.

From ‘the slowest kid on the team’

It was Elaraby’s mom who first introduced him to swimming as a child in Cairo, searching for any way to tire out her young, chatty, social son who had been diagnosed with ADHD.

“So many people told her: ‘He’s the slowest kid on the team. What are you doing?’” Elaraby said. But she stuck with it and her son improved, drawn to the sport by the friends he found there.

In 2018, he became Egypt’s national champion in the 50m fly and won bronze in the 50m freestyle at the Junior Olympic Games.

Aged 18, he left Egypt on a scholarship for the University of Louisville (Kentucky), competing on the swim team. However, while at Louisville, in March 2022, he attempted to take his own life.

He had lost his passion for swimming and that spiralled into feelings of worthlessness, he said in a 2023 video made by the University of Louisville for Mental Health Awareness Month. He overdosed on medication and was taken to hospital, where he fell into a coma.

When Elaraby recovered, he was transferred to a “mental health hospital,” but even then, his thoughts were on returning to competitive swimming, he said in the video.

In the time since March 2022, Elaraby has spoken of “reclaiming” his life, of finding purpose and fulfillment again. Part of that has involved getting closer to his Muslim faith, he said. Another part has been by reducing the time he spends on his phone, instead using it to try things like learning a musical instrument and “reading more about topics in life,” like the philosophy of Stoicism.

And another is by considering: “Who do I allow in my life?”

“I’m the fastest person to block people now (on social media) … just being part of each other’s life is a great honor,” he told CNN Sports.

Although 2023 was tough and he considered quitting swimming, he threw himself into his training and won the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) title in the men’s 50m freestyle.

‘It took away from the love I have for the sport’

In 2023, he left Louisville and swam for the University of Notre Dame, but after graduating, he began working full-time at a non-profit that helps college athletes break into the world of work, giving himself something to focus on beside his training.

“I got so stuck on the idea that I need to win, not because I want to win, I need to win because, if I win, I’m going to make this amount of money; if I win, I’m going to get seen by this amount of investors or sponsors,” he said. “And it took away from the beauty and the love I have for the sport.”

Last year, he was “ready to quit” after failing to qualify for the Egyptian Olympic team. He didn’t have a coach. Notre Dame’s swim team was suspended for a year due to “possible misconduct” and gambling violations and Elaraby says he was not seen as a training priority; he had “every reason” to stop.

Only a passing comment made by an Egyptian entrepreneur while she was interviewing him persuaded Elaraby to continue swimming. “You should go back to swimming, but not because you want to achieve things, it’s because this is what you love,” he recalled her saying.

So he returned to the pool and trained three or four times a week. But without any serious weight training, he went to the World Championships last year in Budapest, Hungary, knowing he was “absolutely out of shape.”

There he finished joint 34th in the 50m butterfly and realized that “being here just for the fun of the sport is not what I wanted. It’s not fulfilling.”

Determined to become a world-class athlete again, Elaraby took it upon himself to buy books about coaching, learned how to coach himself and set up competitions at the end of every month to focus his training blocks.

That approach has paid off, allowing him to break that African 50m fly record and resurrect his goal of qualifying for the Olympics. In a moment of serendipity, Elaraby’s preferred 50m butterfly event, as well as the 50m breaststroke and backstroke, will be included at the 2028 Olympics for the first time in the Games’ history.

This news made Elaraby “so excited,” he said, adding that he believes competing at the Olympics in his preferred event would give him respect that he’s previously been denied.

But, even with such lofty goals, Elaraby’s life remains multifaceted, concentrated as much outside the pool as inside it.

After his suicide attempt, he shared his story in the hope of encouraging others, particularly men, to seek help when they need it. Opening up publicly initially provoked two types of reactions, he said.

“(Some) people were like, ‘Why are you talking about it? This is a very private matter. You should keep it to yourself’ … And then a lot of people were like ‘We feel seen, thank you, you’re so courageous,’” he said.

Speaking so publicly about his mental health and advocating for others to take better care of theirs comes with a complex responsibility. As time went on, Elaraby became wary of people taking his message and using it “to find an excuse not to do things.”

“I don’t want to drown a whole generation while I’m trying to save some people,” he said. “I don’t want to create a world of mentally weak individuals – I’m just trying to allow people to see mental health the right way, just as physical health. I’m not asking people to curl up and cry. I’m just asking people to get help, just like (when) you break an arm.”

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United Way of Hunterdon County Launches First

Youth Sports Foster Positive Mental Health Advisory Board Tackles Most Pressing Needs of Youth Through Sports We’re not just responding to a crisis—we’re building hope, resilience, and opportunity for every young person in America.” — Jennifer Thompson, CEO FLEMINGTON, NJ, UNITED STATES, July 23, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — United Way of Hunterdon County is proud to […]

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United Way of Hunterdon County Launches First

Local Youth Play Sports

Youth Sports Foster Positive Mental Health

Advisory Board Tackles Most Pressing Needs of Youth Through Sports

We’re not just responding to a crisis—we’re building hope, resilience, and opportunity for every young person in America.”

— Jennifer Thompson, CEO

FLEMINGTON, NJ, UNITED STATES, July 23, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — United Way of Hunterdon County is proud to announce the formation of the nation’s first Youth Mental Health & Sports Advisory Board, a groundbreaking initiative uniting experts, coaches, and youth voices to transform the future of youth well-being through the power of play.

The United in Play initiative, already recognized for eliminating financial barriers and providing free mental health resources to youth and families, now takes a bold step forward. The new advisory board will guide national best practices for integrating mental health support into sports programs across all levels, ensuring all children—regardless of background—can access the benefits of play, growth, and thriving mental health.

“Every child deserves the chance to play, grow, and thrive—on and off the field or court,” said Jennifer Thompson, social worker and CEO of United Way of Hunterdon County. “We are living in the middle of a youth mental health crisis, and it’s time for bold, collective action. By bringing together leading minds in mental health, youth sports, and lived experience, our advisory board will pioneer a new era where coaches are equipped, families are supported, and no child is left behind. We’re not just responding to a crisis—we’re building hope, resilience, and opportunity for every young person in America.”

Key Facts:
* 1 in 5 youth experience a mental health challenge, yet therapy and support remain out of reach for many.
* United in Play partners with recreational and club programs to provide access to sports and equipment for ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) families.
* United Way of Hunterdon County provides trauma-informed training and certification for youth sports coaches. Programs are available in-person and online.

Youth Mental Health & Sports Advisory Board Members include:
* Dr. Marlon Grey, Founder EmpowerU
* George Mercado, HBA Director and Coach
* Cheryl Kuster, Nonprofit Leader & Youth Sports Advocate
* Todd Spidare, Owner Fyzical and Club Pilates
* Eric Eisenhart, Managing Partner, Pro-Activity
* Mathew Walker, Director of Football, DVRR Jr. Terriers, Coach
* Pat Spencer, LCSW, Owner, Getting Your Mind in Gear
* Lacy Phelps, Financial Advisor, Edward Jones
* Kevin Graeves, HBA Coach & Youth Sports Trainer
* Scott Koral, Sports Reporter
* Mitchele Drulis, Owner of Evolution Gym
* Jacque Beason, Parent of Youth Athlete & Retired NFL Cheerleader
* Kelly Denti, Owner, Nex Level Ninja

The new advisory board includes national youth representatives, mental health professionals, sports leaders, and community advocates. Together, they will shape policy, drive awareness, and champion innovative solutions at a national level.

About United Way of Hunterdon County:
United Way of Hunterdon County is dedicated to building thriving communities by advancing financial security, youth opportunities, and health for all. Through United in Play and other programs, the organization leads the way in addressing the urgent needs of today’s families and youth.

For more information, to sign your team or league up for training, partnership opportunities, or to join the movement, visit: https://www.uwhunterdon.org/unitedinplay

Jennifer Thompson
United way
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