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Athletes warn against potential health risks of ‘dangerous, unethical’ Enhanced Games

about 16 hours ago
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A group of prominent Australian athletes including former Olympic diver Melissa Wu and Diamonds netballer Natalie Butler (nee Medhurst) has taken aim at the Enhanced Games after the “superhumanity” startup confirmed plans for its first event next year in Las Vegas, where former world champion Dolphin James Magnussen is expected to take part.The inaugural Enhanced Games planned for next May will include medical screening and individualised health profiling for the sprinting, swimming and weightlifting events as well as oversight by independent scientific and ethics boards to address widespread concerns for the safety of those who take part.But Sport Integrity Australia’s six-member Athlete Advisory Group, which also includes rugby sevens representative Ben O’Donnell and gymnast Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva, issued a plea on Thursday for athletes to resist the lure of prize money and recognise their status as role models in society by staying clean.“The normalisation of performance-enhancing drugs promotes doping as entertainment, putting athletes at risk, and devalues the efforts of those who choose to compete clean,” the athlete advisory group said.“We are concerned about the negative role modelling impact on young athletes in particular, and the related health risks of using performance-enhancing substances or methods that may be inadvertently viewed as safe.

”SIA said the proposed health safety measures around next year’s event have not changed its view of the concept, which the agency described as “dangerous, unethical and damaging to sport”.“We work to ensure that sport is safe and fair for all,” SIA chief executive Sarah Benson said.“The Enhanced Games is promoting the complete opposite and poses a significant risk to athlete’s health and safety while undermining the fundamental values of sport in Australia.”The Enhanced Games hopes to draw former elite athletes such as Magnussen with prize money, including $777,000 (US$500,000) for each event and $1.55m (US$1m) for anyone who breaks a recognised world record.

The participants will be required to disclose what substances they use, as organisers promise “advances in medical science”.Sign up to Australia SportGet a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports deskafter newsletter promotionSIA’s new Athlete Advisory Group was announced this week after 70 applications.Their first public act was to express concern over the Enhanced Games.“For athletes considering participation, we strongly urge them to reconsider and fully understand the health risks not only to themselves, but also the influence their choices may have on young athletes who look up to them and emulate their choices,” the advisory group said.“Informed decision-making is critical, especially when it comes to your health, your legacy, and the integrity of the sport.

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politicsSee all
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Lammy’s rebuke of Israel marks turning point after weeks of growing frustration

The anger inside the Foreign Office over Israel’s blockade of aid into Gaza had been slowly building until – like an exploding pressure cooker – the foreign secretary, David Lammy, let loose his most damning criticism of Israeli since the Gaza conflict started in 2023.Lammy’s innate ability to put the rhetorical burners on issues has had to be restrained as the UK’s leading diplomat, but once he entered the Commons chamber to condemn Israel’s blockade of aid, this was Lammy unleashed.One UK diplomat formerly based in the Middle East said: “The language was carefully chosen and it was quite simply unprecedented. It marks a turning point.” Even if Lammy’s rhetoric and his actions did not match, sometimes language matters in diplomacy

about 23 hours ago
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UK politics: No 10 won’t say if fuel payments U-turn will be implemented in time for this winter – as it happened

At the post-PMQs lobby briefing Downing Street was unable to say how many more pensioners would receive winter fuel payments or whether the reforms would be in place this winter.Asked if the changes would be in place this coming winter, the PM’s spokesman said:We obviously want to deliver this as quickly as possible, but the prime minister was very clear in the house that this has to be done in an affordable way, in a funded way, and that’s why those decisions will be taken at a future fiscal event.Officials insisted the pledge to change course was based on the government’s stewardship of the economy and the public finances, PA Media reports. Asked how markets could have confidence in the government if it performed a U-turn whenever Labour suffered an electoral setback, the PM’s press secretary said:We will only make decisions when we can say where the money is coming from, how we’re going to pay for it and that it’s affordable. And that’s what you’ve heard from the prime minister today

1 day ago
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Labour does a major U-turn but does Clueless Kemi even notice? | John Crace

Never change, Kemi, never change. We love you just the way you are. Look on the bright side: it could have been worse. KemiKaze could have used all six of her questions at prime minister’s questions to have re-examined the Tories’ very own rubbish Brexit deal. Just as she had for the previous two days

1 day ago
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Reform councils pledge to scrap LTNs – despite there being none in their areas

Reform UK’s pledge to remove all low-traffic neighbourhoods from the council areas it controls looks to be achieved in record time after the 10 local authorities said they do not actually have any in place.Zia Yusuf, Reform UK’s chair, said last week there would be a “large-scale reversal” of existing LTNs in the 10 areas across England where the party won control of the councils in local elections on 1 May.“We view these schemes with the same suspicion as mass immigration and net zero,” Yusuf told the Telegraph, adding: “You can expect, if you live in a Reform council, for there to be a much higher bar for any proposals for LTNs and for the large-scale reversal of these existing LTNs.”The Guardian contacted the councils now run by Reform – Derbyshire, Doncaster, Durham, Kent, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, North Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire and West Northamptonshire – and they all said they had no such schemes.LTNs are traffic interventions that filter smaller, residential roads using either physical barriers like bollards and planters or numberplate-recognition cameras to prevent motor vehicles using them as through routes

1 day ago
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Rupert Lowe recorded making antisemitic remark at parliament

Rupert Lowe, the MP for Great Yarmouth, made an antisemitic comment during a meeting in parliament earlier this year, the Guardian can reveal.Lowe, who was suspended from Reform UK earlier this year after a fallout with Nigel Farage, made the remark at a meeting where staff were present.In a leaked recording, Lowe can be heard remarking on the size of the camera being prepared to take footage of him. “In days gone by you’d call it a Jewish camera, but that would be politically incorrect. Because it’s so small,” Lowe said

1 day ago
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Rayner urged Reeves to consider wealth tax rises before spring statement

Angela Rayner urged Rachel Reeves to consider a series of wealth tax rises, it has been revealed, in a move that underscores growing unease within the government over the chancellor’s tight spending plans.A memo sent by the deputy prime minister to the chancellor before March’s spring statement proposed eight tax measures worth an estimated £3bn to £4bn a year, including reinstating the pensions lifetime allowance and increasing the corporation tax rate for banks.The proposals were not adopted, with Reeves opting instead to announce cuts to public spending in March, in line with her self-imposed fiscal rules.While the memo, obtained by the Daily Telegraph, was framed as a discussion document, it is likely to be seen as Rayner staking out ground for Labour’s left wing within a cabinet increasingly shaped by Starmer-aligned centrists.The document, called “alternative proposals for raising revenue”, argued the measures would not breach Labour’s 2024 manifesto pledge not to raise taxes “on working people”

1 day ago
societySee all
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Extra cancer scans for women with dense breasts could save 700 lives a year – UK study

about 19 hours ago
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‘It’s all people wanted to talk about’: How Labour U-turned on winter fuel payment cut

about 22 hours ago
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More community sentences in England and Wales could be ‘catastrophic’, warns watchdog

about 23 hours ago
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It’s not ‘grit’ that children lack, but proper support | Letters

1 day ago
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Texas model cuts costs and prison numbers | Letters

1 day ago
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Britain should adopt the Passivhaus standard to cut energy costs in new homes | Letters

1 day ago