Pubdate: 4 Feb 1999 Source: Kyodo News (Japan) DOPING SUMMIT SNAGGED OVER SANCTIONS, AGENCY LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Feb. 4 (Kyodo) -- The IOC-sponsored world congress on doping in sports appeared deadlocked over calls for mandatory sanctions for drug cheats and an independent monitoring agency as meetings came to a close Wednesday. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) had hoped to launch a watchdog agency and forge an agreement during the three-day doping summit on a two-year ban on athletes caught using steroids, but opponents to both proposals make an agreement unlikely this time. IOC officials suggested that they could probably get a basic agreement on the creation of a new monitoring agency, but summit participants were at odds over the organization and operation of the agency. Most notable were calls from the United States and European Union that IOC officials should not command the top positions in the proposed agency since the IOC is currently embroiled in a bribery and corruption scandal. Meanwhile, hopes for an agreement on a mandatory two-year ban on athletes caught using steroids also appeared on the rocks with representatives from soccer and cycling arguing that bans would lead to unnecessary legal problems. Soccer, with a large number of professional players, is concerned that banning players for illicit drug use would lead to a parade of civil suits through the courts as the players sue for their right to work. Still, Primo Nebiolo, head of the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF), seeking an agreement on the two-year ban, offered a compromise under which federations would be able to make exceptions to the two-year ban in some cases. The compromise proposal, however, has been met with sharp criticism from members of the athletes commission and officials from a number of the other international sports federations. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski