suspended from the Commonwealth Games after testing positive in a
doping test taken after she won gold in the women's 53kg category, the
Commonwealth Games Federation announced Tuesday.
The 16-year-old Amalaha provided an 'A' sample on July 25 which
revealed traces of diuretics and masking agents.
She will have a 'B' sample tested at a laboratory in London on July 30.
Commonwealth Games Federation chief executive Mike Hooper said: "We
[have] issued a formal notice of disclosure to an athlete following an
adverse analytical finding as a consequence of an in-competition test.
"That athlete is Nigerian weightlifter Chika Amalaha who was tested on
July 25th. That athlete has now been suspended from the Commonwealth
Games in Glasgow."
Amalaha snatched a best of 85kg before managing 111kg in the clean
and jerk for a total of 196kg, to become the youngest Commonwealth
weightlifter gold medallist.
It was the first doping case of the Glasgow Games and will likely once
again call into question the legitimacyof weightlifting as a
Commonwealth Games sport given its history of drug-related incidents.
Hooper though insisted that the sport had its place in multi-sport
events.
"I think weightlifting is a fantastic sport and a strong Commonwealth
and Olympic sport," he said.
"I think the issue here is about showing we have a robust anti-doping
programme in place. We want to send a message to anybody in any sport
who would go down the route of taking any substance to enhance
performance that they will be caught."
Nigerian weightlifting also has a history of drugs offences.
The Nigerian Weightlifting Federation was suspended for repeated
doping violations by the International Weightlifting Federation in 2001
and banned from competing in the following year's Manchester Games.
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