Ottawa – July 10, 2024 – The Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport (CCES) announced today that Tarek Dahab, a para cycling athlete, received a four-year sanction for an anti-doping rule violation. The athlete’s urine sample, collected out of competition on November 13, 2023, revealed the presence of testosterone, a prohibited anabolic agent.

In response to the CCES’s notification of the adverse analytical finding, the athlete did not dispute the finding and requested a hearing to determine whether the proposed sanction period should be eliminated or reduced. On February 12, 2024, Arbitrator Patrice Brunet confirmed the violation and imposed a four-year sanction. Following the arbitrator’s decision, Cycling Canada filed an appeal of the hearing decision. Arbitrator Carol Roberts denied the appeal and upheld the violation and four-year sanction, which ends on December 20, 2027.

During the sanction period, the athlete is ineligible to participate in any capacity with any sport signatory to the Canadian Anti-Doping Program (CADP) or the World Anti-Doping Code, including training with teammates.

The hearing and appeal decisions can be found at www.crdsc-sdrcc.ca.

About the CCES 

The CCES works collaboratively to ensure Canadians have a positive sport experience. Through its programs, the CCES manages unethical issues in sport, protects the integrity of Canadian sport, and promotes True Sport to activate values-based sport on and off the field of play. The CCES is an independent, national, not-for profit organization that is responsible for the administration of the CADP. Under the CADP rules, the CCES makes public every anti-doping rule violation. For more information, visit cces.ca, follow us on X (Twitter)Facebook, or Instagram

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