UAE patients tell of miracles and mettle as they compete in World Transplant Games


Ramola Talwar Badam
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A close-knit group of transplant patients are delivering a message of grit and resolve through sport as they compete in the UAE’s first-ever World Transplant Games in Germany.

Fuelled by the mantra that they are strong, not fragile, the team of six are among 2,500 participants, including organ donors and donor families, at the week-long games in Dresden.

The Games are taking place this week with athletes from more than 50 countries competing in a wide range of events.

The UAE’s team of five lung, kidney and liver transplant recipients from Sudan, the US, India, Bangladesh and South Africa plus one Emirati donor have shared how they are thriving after life-altering surgeries and are living proof that “miracles do happen”.

For Omar Tom, it has been about beating the odds from the age of three when he was diagnosed with not one but two rare kidney conditions, making visits to the doctor a constant feature.

“At 36, I'm the strongest and healthiest that I've ever been. I've been in sport my whole life,” he told The National as he spoke about his excitement at competing in the 100m and 200m races this week.

“I did not think I would be alive at 36, let alone be stronger, so this is something I'm very grateful for. It's is a gift of life, it’s about showing gratitude to your donor, coaches, friends and to God.

“We are really grateful for the organ, grateful for the light we’ve been given because we are all dealt different cards in life. And whatever that card is, it's your choice to play the best game you can play.”

The UAE team during the opening of the World Transplant Games in Dresden, Germany. Photo: Katie Larkins
The UAE team during the opening of the World Transplant Games in Dresden, Germany. Photo: Katie Larkins

Strong, not fragile

Mr Tom, a natural athlete who enjoys basketball, football, cricket, swimming and more, has pulled through two kidney transplants. His father was his first donor in 2010 but after his body rejected the organ, his younger brother was the second donor in 2016.

The Sudanese national has always pushed back if treated differently like when his anxious family asked younger siblings to carry heavy shopping bags instead of him.

“There was an approach of fragility that my family has had, like I could break at any moment,” he said. “So there was this frustration, annoyance that created an obsession of making sure that I’m not only strong to myself, but to everybody around me.”

He has lived in the UAE all his life and runs a market research and technology company.

“Discipline is really the best muscle to have,” he said. “If you pick sport, it creates a discipline in your life. There is also a mental element, the discipline of practice to become 1 per cent better every day.”

Since the 2017 launch of Hayat (life), the National Programme for Organ Donation and Transplantation, more than 1,100 organ transplants have been completed across the Emirates.

The UAE has made significant strides since the government passed a law in 2016 allowing organ transplants from the living and the dead and encouraging the community to sign up to improve the quality of life of patients suffering from organ failure.

Building a community

The UAE’s participation in the World Transplant Games came through the persistence of Katie Larkins, 36, a liver transplant recipient who submitted the approvals and paperwork for the country to participate in its maiden games.

A science teacher in an Abu Dhabi school, the Californian native has launched an online support group for the transplant community.

“Being a transplant recipient is a very isolating experience, it’s a very rare experience. The community aspect of being able to talk to each other is important,” said Ms Larkins who received the transplant from a Kuwaiti donor four years ago.

“You need someone who understands your experience, makes you feel more included and helps you get back into society.”

Sharing the transplant experience also deepens the understanding of what patients and families undergo.

Ms Larkins was diagnosed with a rare autoimmune liver disease in 2021 after months of extreme fatigue and exhaustion. It was only after alarming blood results, turning so jaundiced that her skin took on a yellow hue, severe water retention and swelling in the abdomen and legs that doctors realised she was far more ill than she looked.

“By the time I had my transplant, my liver was completely done, my kidneys were starting to fail, I was beginning to show signs of heart failure because the liver regulates what everything else is doing,” she said.

Ms Larkins stopped teaching for several months out of concern that her immunity would be compromised in school.

“I spent months pretending that everything was fine. I had a pretty unhealthy dose of denial. I didn't really accept that I was well and truly sick until they told me that I couldn't leave the hospital,” she said.

The World Games, running from August 17 to 24, offer hope to patients on transplant waiting lists around the world.

Ms Larkins initially planned to manage the UAE team but was swept up in the excitement of competing in the 5k and 3k to spread the word that others too can be strong.

“After a situation that's so life threatening and so scary, it's unnerving for some people to start exercising again, because you're so scared of doing anything to harm your body,” she said.

“It took me a while get back into exercise but I'm really glad I did. It's something that all transplant patients should try to set their sights on – that goal to be physically healthy and fit – because by keeping ourselves healthy, we can keep our donated organs healthy for much longer.

“Our team this year is small but it's our first time and I expect that in 2027 when we do this again, the team will be much larger because a lot more people will know about it.”

From oxygen tanks to throwing the javelin

In social media posts, the athletes share their exuberance over breathing freely after a transplant and explain why they have taken up competitive sport.

Emirati Hind Al Maazmi donated a kidney to her mother and competes in the 5km, 3km and 100m “to show what love can drive you to”.

Double lung recipient Husena Beguwala, from India, said she fought setbacks for years and is running the 5km and 3km for her son, for awareness and for “everyone still waiting to rewrite their story”.

South African Justin Anthony, also a double lung recipient, looks forward to the field competitions.

“From living on oxygen 24/7 to throwing the javelin in Germany, I’m breathing freely today thanks to my donor,” he said. “I compete to honour a miracle and prove that, when hope seems lost, miracles can still break through.”

Fatima Rashid, a kidney recipient from Bangladesh, has a packed schedule with the 100m, 200m, 5k and javelin.

She took on scuba diving, weightlifting and skiing post-transplant and competes because “movement is my freedom”, she said. “Now I compete to prove that strength isn’t just physical – it’s mental, spiritual, and fuelled by purpose.”

Dhadak 2

Director: Shazia Iqbal

Starring: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Triptii Dimri 

Rating: 1/5

The Bio

Favourite vegetable: “I really like the taste of the beetroot, the potatoes and the eggplant we are producing.”

Holiday destination: “I like Paris very much, it’s a city very close to my heart.”

Book: “Das Kapital, by Karl Marx. I am not a communist, but there are a lot of lessons for the capitalist system, if you let it get out of control, and humanity.”

Musician: “I like very much Fairuz, the Lebanese singer, and the other is Umm Kulthum. Fairuz is for listening to in the morning, Umm Kulthum for the night.”

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GIANT REVIEW

Starring: Amir El-Masry, Pierce Brosnan

Director: Athale

Rating: 4/5

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million 
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From Zero

Artist: Linkin Park

Label: Warner Records

Number of tracks: 11

Rating: 4/5

UPI facts

More than 2.2 million Indian tourists arrived in UAE in 2023
More than 3.5 million Indians reside in UAE
Indian tourists can make purchases in UAE using rupee accounts in India through QR-code-based UPI real-time payment systems
Indian residents in UAE can use their non-resident NRO and NRE accounts held in Indian banks linked to a UAE mobile number for UPI transactions

SHOW COURTS ORDER OF PLAY

Centre Court (4pm UAE/12pm GMT)
Victoria Azarenka (BLR) v Heather Watson (GBR)
Rafael Nadal (ESP x4) v Karen Khachanov (RUS x30)
Andy Murray (GBR x1) v Fabio Fognini (ITA x28)

Court 1 (4pm UAE)
Steve Johnson (USA x26) v Marin Cilic (CRO x7)
Johanna Konta (GBR x6) v Maria Sakkari (GRE)
Naomi Osaka (JPN) v Venus Williams (USA x10)

Court 2 (2.30pm UAE)
Aljaz Bedene (GBR) v Gilles Muller (LUX x16)
Peng Shuai (CHN) v Simona Halep (ROM x2)
Jelena Ostapenko (LAT x13) v Camila Giorgi (ITA)
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (FRA x12) v Sam Querrey (USA x24)

Court 3 (2.30pm UAE)
Kei Nishikori (JPN x9) v Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP x18)
Carina Witthoeft (GER) v Elina Svitolina (UKR x4)

Court 12 (2.30pm UAE)
Dominika Cibulkova (SVK x8) v Ana Konjuh (CRO x27)
Kevin Anderson (RSA) v Ruben Bemelmans (BEL)

Court 18 (2.30pm UAE)
Caroline Garcia (FRA x21) v Madison Brengle (USA)
Benoit Paire (FRA) v Jerzy Janowicz (POL)

The specs

Engine: 5.2-litre twin-turbo V12

Transmission: eight-speed automatic

Power: 715bhp

Torque: 900Nm

Price: Dh1,289,376

On sale: now

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Manchester City 6
(D Silva 26', Sterling 38', 81', 87', De Bruyne 61', Jesus 68')

Watford 0

Man of the match: Bernardo Silva (Manchester City)

Company Profile 

Founder: Omar Onsi

Launched: 2018

Employees: 35

Financing stage: Seed round ($12 million)

Investors: B&Y, Phoenician Funds, M1 Group, Shorooq Partners

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Three tips from La Perle's performers

1 The kind of water athletes drink is important. Gwilym Hooson, a 28-year-old British performer who is currently recovering from knee surgery, found that out when the company was still in Studio City, training for 12 hours a day. “The physio team was like: ‘Why is everyone getting cramps?’ And then they realised we had to add salt and sugar to the water,” he says.

2 A little chocolate is a good thing. “It’s emergency energy,” says Craig Paul Smith, La Perle’s head coach and former Cirque du Soleil performer, gesturing to an almost-empty open box of mini chocolate bars on his desk backstage.

3 Take chances, says Young, who has worked all over the world, including most recently at Dragone’s show in China. “Every time we go out of our comfort zone, we learn a lot about ourselves,” she says.

Retirement funds heavily invested in equities at a risky time

Pension funds in growing economies in Asia, Latin America and the Middle East have a sharply higher percentage of assets parked in stocks, just at a time when trade tensions threaten to derail markets.

Retirement money managers in 14 geographies now allocate 40 per cent of their assets to equities, an 8 percentage-point climb over the past five years, according to a Mercer survey released last week that canvassed government, corporate and mandatory pension funds with almost $5 trillion in assets under management. That compares with about 25 per cent for pension funds in Europe.

The escalating trade spat between the US and China has heightened fears that stocks are ripe for a downturn. With tensions mounting and outcomes driven more by politics than economics, the S&P 500 Index will be on course for a “full-scale bear market” without Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts, Citigroup’s global macro strategy team said earlier this week.

The increased allocation to equities by growth-market pension funds has come at the expense of fixed-income investments, which declined 11 percentage points over the five years, according to the survey.

Hong Kong funds have the highest exposure to equities at 66 per cent, although that’s been relatively stable over the period. Japan’s equity allocation jumped 13 percentage points while South Korea’s increased 8 percentage points.

The money managers are also directing a higher portion of their funds to assets outside of their home countries. On average, foreign stocks now account for 49 per cent of respondents’ equity investments, 4 percentage points higher than five years ago, while foreign fixed-income exposure climbed 7 percentage points to 23 per cent. Funds in Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and Taiwan are among those seeking greater diversification in stocks and fixed income.

• Bloomberg

Updated: August 20, 2025, 7:10 AM