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On the carpet
Samaranch appears before Congress to defend reforms
Posted: Thursday December 16, 1999 09:04 AM
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Some U.S. lawmakers aren't very impressed with the reform efforts of Juan Antonio Samaranch. AP |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch told
skeptical lawmakers Wednesday that the IOC has become more open,
accountable and responsive following widespread abuses in the
selection of Atlanta and Salt Lake City as Olympic hosts.
"I think we've cleaned the house and a fundamental reform
package has been adopted," Samaranch said in his first ever
appearance before a congressional panel.
But lawmakers greeted the 79-year-old Spaniard with open
disbelief that the 50 reforms the International Olympic Committee
adopted last weekend in Switzerland will be implemented fully. And
one, Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, reiterated his call for Samaranch to
resign the post he has held since 1980.
"I would like for you to announce today that you will resign,"
Barton said. "It's time for some new blood and some new
leadership. And this would be a great setting for you to be a true
statesman of sport and announce that."
Samaranch did not respond directly to Barton when he delivered
his opening statement. Instead, he used it to retrace the IOC's
actions in the year since the allegations of vote buying in the
selection of Salt Lake City as host of the 2002 Winter Olympics
became known.
Samaranch said many of the reforms approved by the IOC last
weekend already have been implemented, including a ban on future
visits by IOC members to cities competing for the games. And he
assured the House Commerce subcommittee on oversight and
investigations that the rest of the reforms will be implemented
before the 2000 Summer Games in Sydney, Australia, are over.
Samaranch faced anything but polite questioning from some
lawmakers who grilled him about a reported $500,000-a-year hotel
suite the IOC maintains for him in Switzerland, about his wife's
acceptance of a $12,000 trip from organizers of the Atlanta games
and about the IOC failure to apply the new reforms to its
president.
Samaranch denounced reports of the luxury hotel suite as "a
lie." He said he encouraged his wife to take the Atlanta trip and
blamed the Atlanta organizers for being overly hospitable. He
insisted there was no need for the reforms to apply to him.
Speaking through a translator, Samaranch said he first became
aware that cities seeking the Olympics were providing gifts and
other amenities to IOC members in 1984, when Los Angeles won the
Summer Games. But he said the IOC was not able to take action to
stop such abuses before this year because no one ever provided the
committee with names of offending members.
"We can only take action at the IOC when we have complete
facts," he said.
Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the panel, said statements
by IOC members following the meeting last weekend give him little
confidence that changes will be made.
"The conduct by IOC members and the bidding cities did not
spring up yesterday and it will not go away simply because there
are new rules written on a piece of paper," he said.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., warned Samaranch that Congress will
monitor the IOC's enforcement of the newly enacted reforms and will
take punitive action if necessary. He specifically cited
legislation he has introduced that would bar American companies
from financially supporting the games if the IOC does not change
its practices.
Samaranch brought along some important allies, including former
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former Sen. Howard Baker,
R-Tenn. Kissinger was a key member of the IOC 2000 panel that
drafted the reforms, and Baker serves on the new ethics commission
the IOC created in the wake of the Salt Lake City abuses.
The reforms include a ban on IOC member visits to bid cities,
the addition of 15 active athletes to the IOC, and new rules on age
limits and terms of office -- all designed to make the 105-year-old
organization younger and more accountable.
"We did what we promised," said Samaranch, who had delayed his
appearance before Congress until after the vote on the reform
package.
Former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young and Billy Payne, who headed
the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, acknowledged at
hearings in October that Atlanta violated IOC gift rules in
lobbying for the 1996 games.
But they denied that the gifts and favors showered on IOC
members were designed to buy their votes or corrupt the process
that led to Atlanta's selection.
Samaranch arrived in Washington on Tuesday and met with Barry
McCaffrey, the White House drug policy adviser who has criticized
both Samaranch and the IOC's project for a world anti-doping
agency. McCaffrey has since endorsed the drug agency.
"Mr. Samaranch, prior to testifying in Congress, we wanted to
stand with him and say if [the IOC] will execute the historic
reforms, if they will stand with us on creating an independent drug
testing agency, we will support their leadership," McCaffrey said
after the 30-minute meeting.
McCaffrey and Samaranch released a 17-point agreement, although
McCaffrey conceded it was non-binding. There were no groundbreaking
proposals and the agreement essentially reiterated ideas generated
from the formation of the IOC's World Anti-Doping Agency last month
and a meeting between McCaffrey and WADA head Dick Pound two weeks
ago.
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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