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Heavyweight contender Lawrence Okolie tests positive for doping ahead of Tony Yoka fight

Sport

Heavyweight contender Lawrence Okolie tests positive for doping ahead of Tony Yoka fight
Sport

Sport

Heavyweight contender Lawrence Okolie tests positive for doping ahead of Tony Yoka fight

2026-04-21 18:29 Last Updated At:18:31

LONDON (AP) — Heavyweight title contender Lawrence Okolie failed a drugs test ahead of his fight scheduled Saturday against former Olympic champion Tony Yoka.

The bout’s promoter Queensberry announced the positive test Tuesday without giving further details about the case, or the show in Paris.

Okolie wrote in a social media post: “I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name.”

The 33-year-old British boxer faces a ban of up to four years unless he can prove he was not to blame for the positive doping test.

Okolie is a former world champion at cruiserweight who moved up to heavyweight. He is the No. 1-ranked contender by the WBC whose belt is held by Oleksandr Usyk.

“I truly hope sense prevails,” Okolie wrote Tuesday. “Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here.”

Queensberry said Okolie was tested by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) ahead of the Paris show.

Okolie’s intended opponent Yoka took the super-heavyweight gold medal at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

Yoka served a one-year ban imposed by the French anti-doping agency in 2018 for failing to give a doping sample three times in a one-year period.

AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

FILE - Britain's Lawrence Okolie, left, and South Africa's Kevin Lerena in action during the world heavyweight boxing title fight In London, on July 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)

FILE - Britain's Lawrence Okolie, left, and South Africa's Kevin Lerena in action during the world heavyweight boxing title fight In London, on July 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Hungarian legislation banning the availability of LGBTQ+ content to minors violates European Union law and breaches a foundational treaty guaranteeing respect for human rights and equality, the bloc’s court ruled Tuesday.

The European Court of Justice said that Hungary's legislation, adopted in 2021 by the nationalist-populist government of outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, “stigmatizes and marginalizes" LGBTQ+ persons, and fails to uphold the EU's prohibition of discrimination based on sex or sexual orientation.

Hungary’s law, which was widely criticized by human rights groups, prohibited the display of content to minors that depicts homosexuality or gender change, while also providing harsher penalties for crimes of pedophilia.

The government argued its policies, including a more recent law and constitutional amendment that effectively banned the popular Budapest Pride event, sought to protect children from what it calls “sexual propaganda.”

But critics of the legislation have compared it to Russia’s gay propaganda law of 2013, and say it conflates homosexuality with pedophilia. Last year, over 100,000 people took part in a Budapest Pride march in defiance of the government's ban.

In its ruling, the Luxembourg-based court found that, for the first time in an action brought against one of the EU's 27 member states, Hungary had violated Article 2 of the bloc's foundational treaty, which defines “the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities.”

It also found that the law breached rules relating to services in the EU's internal market, as well as data protection laws.

Orbán's government was defeated in a landslide election on April 12 by the center-right Tisza party and its leader, Péter Magyar, bringing an end to Orbán's 16 years in power.

Magyar's government is expected to take office in mid-May, and has pledged to pursue a more constructive approach to its relationship with the EU.

During his election campaign, Magyar was cautious about engaging in Orbán's culture-war debate over LGBTQ+ rights. But in his April 12 victory speech, he said Hungary would become a country “where no one is stigmatized for loving someone differently than the majority.”

FILE - Participants in the Pride march cross the Elisabeth Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, Saturday, June 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Rudolf Karancsi, File)

FILE - Participants in the Pride march cross the Elisabeth Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, Saturday, June 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Rudolf Karancsi, File)

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