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Members of Chinese delegation for Olympic Games attend an official ceremony in Beijing. Photo: Xinhua

Zero tolerance: China stipulates no drug pledge and written tests for Olympic Games-bound athletes

The country will send 416 athletes to the Games next month, the largest overseas delegation in Olympic history

China has asked Olympic Games-bound athletes and coaches to sign a pledge not to use banned drugs and pass a written test, as they seeks to enforce a zero tolerance stance on doping.

Gao Zhidan, vice director of China’s General Administration of Sport who will lead China’s 711-member delegation, said rule violators would be punished severely, and those who failed the written test – which requires 80 out of 100 points to pass – would be barred from travelling to Rio de Janeiro.

“China have been firmly against doping and have a zero-tolerance approach to this particular problem,” he said.

“We have made it very clear that we want to ensure fair play and the well-being of athletes.”

Models pose in Chinese team uniforms for different sports during an event to unveil the official Team China 2016 Rio Olympics team uniforms at the Water Cube in Beijing. Photo: AP

The country will send 416 athletes to the Games next month, the largest overseas delegation in Olympic history.

Doping has swung into focus ahead of the Rio Olympics after an independent report detailed systematic, state-run doping programme in Russia, leading the International Olympic Committee to consider banning the country entirely from the Games.

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