Athlete is still in shock after being drugged

Nearly two weeks after her return to Quebec, swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey is still in shock at having been drugged without her knowledge on her last day at the World Aquatics in Budapest.

Athlete is still in shock after being drugged

Nearly two weeks after her return to Quebec, swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey is still in shock at having been drugged without her knowledge on her last day at the World Aquatics in Budapest.

• Read also: Mary-Sophie Harvey claims to have been drugged at the world aquatics

After experiencing the best Worlds in its history with a harvest of 11 medals, the Canadian team was celebrating its success when Harvey lost the map for a period of four to six hours.

Other teams were also present during this evening of June 25.

"I'm taking it one day at a time," Harvey said. I have been told little bits of the story, but the feeling of not remembering what happened with all the possibilities that entails is still very present. It's not the best feeling, knowing that you had no control over your body. »

Harvey believes he is making progress. "I'm learning to live with the event because last week I wouldn't have been able to give an interview. I'm starting to accept it. »

Found on the street

Worried about not seeing her anymore, a friend of the native swimmer from Trois-Rivières went looking for her. Frenchwoman Charlotte Bonnet finally found Harvey on the street.

"She looked for me for 45 minutes before finally finding me on the street," said the Olympian from the Tokyo Games. She told me that I told her not to leave me alone and that I needed her. »

"Afterwards, two or three other girls took me back to my room," Harvey continued. I fell unconscious at one point and they laid me in my bed. I was disturbed when I woke up to see the doctor and team manager at my bedside. »

If she hesitated for a long time before sharing her story on her Instagram account, Wednesday evening, Harvey does not regret it. “I have received many testimonies from people who have been through the same situation. The number is really disturbing and yet we hardly hear about it. Victims do not report these situations because they are ashamed. »

She doesn't think she was raped

Upon returning home, Harvey contacted the Sexual Assault Victims Assistance Center (CAVAS) of Montreal.

"I was struck by the gaps in the resources available to victims," ​​she said.

“I told my story as best I could, but I didn't feel supported. I left a message in a specialized clinic whose contact details had been given to me and I had a return call two days later. I don't think I was a victim of rape, but I felt left out. »

Harvey can count on the support of his great friend and teammate Katerine Savard.

“She convinced me and her mother, who is a doctor, to contact the support services and that I had nothing to be ashamed of. »

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