WMA Calls For Ban On Boxing
The World Medical Association today added its voice to calls
for a total ban on boxing.
Following last Saturday's world title fight between the South
African boxer, Mbulelo Botile, and Paul Ingle from Britain, in
which Ingle suffered serious injury, Dr. Delon Human, Secretary
General of the WMA, said that ringside physicians should be allowed
to stop any bout at any stage of a fight.
He said that the WMA had adopted policy in 1983 for a ban on
boxing.
"The WMA has called on its members world-wide to put pressure
on the boxing authorities in their countries to ensure the safety
of boxers while boxing is still allowed to continue. No boxing
bouts should be allowed, however, unless they are held in the
vicinity of a neurosurgical unit, or unless resuscitation equipment
is available at the ringside.
"In addition, the ringside physicians should be allowed
to stop any bout at any stage of a fight depending on the damage
inflicted on a fighter.
"Boxing is quite unlike any other sport in that the basic
intent is to cause bodily harm to the opponent. It is impossible
to participate in boxing without being hurt. It cannot fairly
be described as a sport; it is simply a barbaric practice.
"We are especially concerned by this particular case, where
it seems that the fight should have been stopped at a much earlier
stage. How many young men's lives and health, and now female boxers
as well, must be lost before we stop this organized form of barbarism?"
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