A visitor looks at a doping awareness
poster during an anti-doping exhibition in Beijing January 17, 2007. China
now has a lower number of doping cases than the international average, but
the use of banned substances is spreading from elite athletes to the
general population, a Beijing Olympics official said on Wednesday. The
Chinese characters read "The harm of doping."[Reuters]
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Around 4,500 dope tests will be
conducted during the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, rising up by 25% from Athens
Games 2004, the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2008 Olympic Games (BOCOG)
said on Wednesday.
"As part of its zero tolerance approach to fighting doping, the International
Olympic Committee has decided to increase the number of tests by a large
amount," BOCOG executive vice president Yang Shu'an told reporters when
attending an exhibition themed "The Olympic Movement and Anti-doping Drive".
"Final numbers are to be confirmed but are expected to be around 4,500, a 25
percent increase on Athens 2004," he added.
More than 3,500 tests were conducted during the Athens Games, also a 25
percent rise on the 2000 Summer Games in Sydney.
The exhibition, which will run through Saturday, reviews a number of doping
cases in the past years and provides video display of anti-doping test process
as well as computer inter-action means for visitors to test their knowledge
about the anti-doping combat.
It is the first of its kind proposed by Beijing to target a wider audience
instead of a number of specialists in the history of the Olympic Games. Similar
exhibitions are expected to be organized in 2007 and 2008 in various parts of
China.