Breaking 18:46 US Economy Regains Momentum in Early 2026 Amid Stronger Growth Data 18:32 United States-Morocco: Washington Prepares a Strategic Military Partnership Until 2036 18:28 World Cup 2026: The Moroccan Embassy in Mexico Issues Practical Guide for Atlas Lions Supporters 18:08 Apple raises global product prices amid rising AI chip costs 17:52 Meta explores prediction markets with new Arena platform 17:20 Royal Air Maroc launches special flights to Monterrey for Lions de l'Atlas supporters 16:38 Washington rejects fees on international waterways amid Strait of Hormuz debate 14:30 Rubio warns that proposed Strait of Hormuz transit fees could trigger global maritime disruption 13:01 Federal Reserve overhauls banking supervision structure to boost efficiency and transparency 12:21 Trump Pledges Immediate Aid to Venezuela After Devastating Earthquakes 12:00 Trump requests $87.6 billion from Congress to cover Iran conflict costs and military replenishment 11:30 Rubio strengthens Gulf diplomacy amid rising tensions over Iran and the Strait of Hormuz 10:45 Anthropic unveils Claude Tag, an AI teammate designed for Slack collaboration 10:27 OpenAI unveils Jalapeño, Its first AI chip to accelerate inference 10:18 Artificial intelligence challenges Google’s search dominance despite its continued leadership 07:46 Trump urges defense companies to accelerate weapons production and strengthen military stockpiles 07:33 World Cup 2026 breaks viewing and attendance records as global enthusiasm reaches new heights 07:15 Elon Musk Says Humanoid Robots Could Reduce the Importance of Money in the Future

US Withholds Funding to WADA, Demands Reforms

Thursday 09 January 2025 - 13:30
US Withholds Funding to WADA, Demands Reforms

The United States has decided to withhold a payment of $3.6 million in dues to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) for its failure to conduct an independent audit of its operations, according to the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA).

USADA's CEO, Travis Tygart, expressed full support for the decision, calling it the "only right choice" to safeguard athletes’ rights, fairness, and accountability in competition. WADA’s operating budget for 2025 is set at $57.5 million, with the US government’s owed dues amounting to $3.625 million.

This move follows WADA’s controversial handling of doping tests involving 23 Chinese swimmers who were later allowed to compete despite positive results. Tygart stated that WADA’s leadership had failed to meet reasonable requests for reforms, such as an independent audit, which would ensure transparency and accountability in the agency’s operations. He emphasized that significant changes at WADA are necessary to prevent such incidents in the future and ensure fair competition for athletes.

In response, WADA acknowledged the non-payment and confirmed that US representatives would not be eligible to sit on the WADA Executive Board for 2025 due to the unpaid dues. Under WADA's statutes, representatives from countries that do not pay their dues lose their board seats automatically at the beginning of each year.

Despite the US withholding payments, Tygart assured that it would not affect US athletes’ participation in global events. He affirmed that the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) will continue to enforce anti-doping regulations to protect the rights of US Olympic and Paralympic athletes.

Tygart stressed the need for a strong and independent WADA and reiterated the importance of a fair and transparent global anti-doping system. He also pointed out the significance of ensuring clean competition in upcoming major events, such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.