Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, July 2 (Xinhua) -- "Is that all? Show me
recipes for a whole month."
Dissatisfied by a thin pad of prescriptions offered
by an employee at a west Beijing chemist's, Wang Zhexiong demanded more to check
whether rules were being followed in the selling of medicine containing
performance-enhancing substances.
The call of Wang, deputy head of drug safety with
China's State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA), is part of China's more
aggressive anti-doping efforts ahead of the Olympics.
In the latest move senior officials, including Wang,
from the central government were sent to Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin and 12
provincial areas for anti-doping inspections. The 12-day campaign is to last
till July 7.
The inspectors were dispatched by seven
ministry-level government agencies, including drug safety, health and public
security watchdogs, and the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games
(BOCOG).
Every link, from drug producers and chemical plants
to medicine wholesalers and retailers, would be checked through spot checks,
both announced and covert.
"We must ensure nothing goes wrong with any of these
links, especially over the counters," said Wang. "So that as few chances as
possible are left for doping drug misuse, unintentional or intentional, by
athletes."
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