Pubdate: Mon, 11 May 1998 Source: European, The Contact: http://www.the-european.com/ Author: Gerard Mulholland OLYMPIC BAN I have been trying to understand the reasons for the International Olympics Committee's decision to add cannabis to the list of proscribed drugs for which Olympic athletes will be tested. It cannot be because cannabis is "performance enhancing". It isn't. On the contrary, cannabis is a relaxing recreational drug that inhibits performance of any kind. If the IOC wants an all-inclusive list of performance-enhancing drugs it should have added tea and coffee to its list, not to mention chocolate. It cannot be simply because cannabis is illegal in some countries, because that logic would oblige the IOC to ban both alcohol and female athletes. It cannot be to avoid offending the domestic legislation of host countries, because it would not offend in all such countries. Besides, athletes are bound to obey the domestic legislation of their host country, regardless of any IOC rule. Clearly, this decision reflects a personal obsession on the part of key IOC members. This obsession is with the separate question of the war on illegal recreational drugs. It has nothing to do with the global campaign against performance-enhancing drugs in sport. The war against illegal drugs is contentious, not universal and certainly does not enjoy unqualified public support. It is a battle which shows every sign of being very expensively lost. The campaign against performance-enhancing drugs in sport is global, universally approved and opposed only by cheats. By irrationally mixing the two campaigns, the IOC has delivered a severe blow to what is left of the ideals of Pierre de Coubertin. As we lose the war against illegal drugs, the public perception of sporting drugs will be changed and eventually that will be lost as well, to the great regret of far more people than the short-sighted IOC. Gerard Mulholland Paris, France. - --- Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"