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Case closed
IOC tries to end a year of scandal at board meeting
Posted: Tuesday December 07, 1999 01:51 PM
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One year ago, senior IOC executive board member Marc Hodler made allegations of systematic corruption. AP |
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) -- When the International Olympic
Committee executive board met last December in Lausanne, the
organization was thrown into turmoil by the biggest corruption
scandal in its 105-year history.
A year later, the IOC opens meetings Wednesday with the focus on
enacting a package of scandal-driven reforms and bringing the
crisis to a symbolic close.
"The crisis ends when we adopt the reforms," IOC vice
president Dick Pound said in an interview. "It's all over but the
shooting. We've just got to close the circle."
IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch is urging committee members
to put aside individual interests and approve the reforms for a
greater cause.
"The crisis that we have experienced this year has been far
more serious than we could have imagined," he said in a letter to
all members, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.
"To begin the new millennium in the best conditions, the IOC must
reform and adapt its structures.
"The whole world is watching us, and expecting resolute action
from us which will show that we know how to place the common good
above the preservation of particular prerogatives. While we are
masters of our own organization, we cannot ignore worldwide
opinion."
The 50 proposed reforms will be reviewed by the executive board
during its three-day meeting before being submitted to the full IOC
for approval Saturday and Sunday.
The meetings will conclude a year to the day after senior IOC
executive board member Marc Hodler made allegations of systematic
corruption in the host city bidding and selection process.
Hodler's allegations came shortly after the disclosure of
improprieties in Salt Lake City's successful bid for the 2002
Winter Games.
Investigations showed that Salt Lake bidders showered more than
$1.2 million in cash, scholarships, gifts, travel, medical care and
other inducements on IOC members and their families.
The scandal prompted the expulsion of six IOC members and the
resignation of four others, led to the resignations of Salt Lake's
top two Olympic officials and resulted in criminal charges against
two people so far.
The IOC has taken a series of steps in a bid to repair its image
and credibility. It set up an ethics commission, became more open
and transparent, offered to be governed by an international
anti-bribery treaty and used a special commission - with Henry
Kissinger among its members - to draw up a series of wide-ranging
reforms.
The reforms are intended to make the IOC younger, more modern,
more democratic, more representative and less susceptible to
corruption.
The proposals include:
-The inclusion of 15 active athletes on an IOC that will have a
maximum of 115 members. Athletes will be represented on the
executive board.
-An age limit of 70 (current members will still be covered by
the 80 limit).
-A screening and nomination process for IOC members.
-Renewable, eight-year terms for members.
-A term limit for IOC presidents (either one eight-term, or with
the possibility of a second term of four or eight years)
-National Olympic committees to be wholly responsible for
Olympic bids.
-Introduction of bid acceptance procedure, requiring prospective
candidate cities to meet minimum standards.
-Member visits to bid cities either prohibited or restricted,
pending permission of executive board, to trips organized and paid
for by IOC.
Top IOC officials say the crisis provided the impetus for the
IOC to modernize itself.
"It has given us an opportunity to accomplish in the course of
one year what would have taken decades," Pound said.
Approval of the reforms is considered a vital test by the IOC's
critics in the United States.
The White House deems it "absolutely critical" for the IOC to
enact the reforms, said Mickey Ibarra, an assistant to President
Clinton for intergovernmental affairs.
On Dec. 15, Samaranch is to appear in Washington before the
House subcommittee on oversight and investigations to explain the
reforms. Congressional leaders have threatened to cut off American
corporate and television support for the IOC if lasting reforms
aren't adopted.
In a sign of change, Salt Lake and Sydney organizers will stay
at home this week and make their progress reports to the executive
board by video conference rather than travel to Lausanne as
customary.
The IOC headquarters, meanwhile, will be closed to reporters
during the executive board meeting. The decision, officially due to
a shortage of space, ensures there will be no repeat of last year's
scenes when Hodler made his bribery allegations in a series of
impromptu news conferences in the IOC's marble lobby.
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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