OLYMPIC COMMITTEE SAYS IT WILL NOT MAKE PROGRESS REPORTS TO CONGRESS
Apr 26th, 1999 • Posted in: NewsLAUSANNE, Switzerland
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) last week rejected a request by the U.S. Congress for monthly updates on IOC progress in stamping out internal corruption.
Sen. John McCain (R.-Ariz.) had spearheaded the demand, saying that U.S. lawmakers and the public still have “significant skepticism” about the IOC’s anticorruption efforts, according to the Reuters news agency.
Kevin Gosper, a member of the IOC ethics commission, expressed surprise at McCain’s request for further proof of the IOC’s commitment to reform after the bribes-for votes scandal surrounding the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City.
“I don’t know any international corporations doing (that). I don’t know any U.S. corporations doing it, and don’t know why we should be asked to do it,” Gosper said at a Foreign Correspondents Association luncheon.
Washington lawmakers have warned that the IOC could face stiff sanctions if the group fails to show significant progress in the near future.
The IOC’s new ethics committee is scheduled to meet for the first time on May 3.
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