Pubdate: Tue, 25 August 1998 Source: The Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Author: Nicole Jeffrey OLYMPIC BOSS CALLS FOR WAR ON DRUG CHEATS AUSTRALIA'S Olympic chief yesterday demanded drug-cheating athletes be jailed and their dealers in anabolic steroids face life sentences. John Coates, president of the Australian Olympic Committee, said suppliers of hard sports drugs should be subject to the same penalties as narcotics traffickers. He called on State and federal governments to introduce the toughest criminal penalties in the world for users and traders of sports drugs, including jail sentences of up to two years for cheating athletes. He said the current criminal penalties were inadequate when there was evidence anabolic steroid abuse had outstripped that of heroin or cocaine in the general community. "If we are to ensure that the 2000 Olympic Games are not remembered as the Drug Games, immediate action is required," he said. He said the current sports drug penalties, which ranged from fines to a maximum penalty of two years in jail, were significantly lighter than those for narcotics and were not a sufficient deterrent. In a submission to Prime Minister John Howard and State leaders, Mr Coates sought a commitment from all governments to introduce uniform, strict penalties. A spokesman for Justice Minister Amanda Vanstone said last night the State and Commonwealth attorneys-general were already considering a similar proposal. ""The Commonwealth and the State attorneys are consulting on a draft report on serious drug offences, which includes this proposal," he said. A spokesman for Queensland Premier Peter Beattie said he was ""very sympathetic", but would need to look closely at the detail of the AOC plan. Mr Coates said he had informed International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch of the proposal and hoped other countries would adopt it at the IOC's world anti-doping summit in February. The AOC has also toughened its own penalties on Olympic athletes who are found guilty of using serious performance-enhancing drugs like anabolic steroids, beta-2 agonists, human growth hormone (HGH), erythropoietin (EPO). Mr Coates said any member of the 2000 Olympic team who committed a serious doping offence would be required to return all grants from the AOC and the Foster's Sports Foundation. He said this could amount to between $100,000 and $500,000. The AOC would also encourage all athletes to make the same commitment to their personal sponsors to pay back the money if they were exposed as drug cheats. Olympic athletes contacted yesterday were highly supportive of the AOC initiative. ""I think it's a very bold move and will set Australia up as the benchmark against drugs," AOC Athletes' Commission member Nicole Stevenson, a retired Olympic swimming medallist, said. ""People might ask how sports drugs can be put in the same category as heroin, but some of the drugs athletes are taking can also cause serious illness and death." Olympic sprinter Melinda Gainsford-Taylor was enthusiastic about the proposal. ""I think that's fabulous - putting in harder penalties is a great idea," she said. - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst