Pubdate: Wed, 03 Feb 1999 Source: Kyodo News (Japan) IOC SUGGESTS TOUGH NEW TEXT FOR OLYMPIC CHARTER LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Feb. 3 (Kyodo) -- There was tough talk by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) at its ongoing doping conference in Lausanne on Wednesday, with some members calling for a revised text of the Olympic Charter to be drafted. A working group of the IOC ethics committee submitted a proposal to introduce ''respect for fair play'' and a phrase promoting the ethics of sport into a new charter which, they said, would help give the tarnished Olympic Movement an image overhaul. The committee also urged that athletes submit to the IOC a written document stating they are drug-free before each Olympics with the understanding that, if tested positive for steroids, any sponsorship contracts will be immediately terminated. IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch, under pressure to quit in the wake of the bribery scandal surrounding recent Olympic bids, was given more to think about as German athletics chief Helmut Digel suggested that sports failing to deal with drug cheats be kicked out of the Games. ''It can't be that we have a case three months before the 2000 Sydney Games that an athlete, a cyclist and a soccer player test positive and one goes to the Games while the others can't,'' he explained on the second day of the three-day symposium. Meanwhile, Britain's former Olympic 1,500-meter champion Sebastian Coe criticized the IOC's handling of U.S. sprinter Dennis Mitchell, who tested positive last season for excessive amounts of testosterone. The 1992 Olympic 100-meter bronze medalist was cleared after arguing that his high testosterone level was down to his having drunk beer and had sex with his wife the night before his drug test. ''It stretches confidence and credibility to breaking point that in the United States a high profile Olympian escapes a ban with this kind of excuse,'' said Coe, a former Conservative Member of Parliament who has campaigned vigorously against doping in sport. - --- MAP posted-by: Joel W. Johnson