>From wsws.org

WSWS : News & Analysis : Sport Issues

Behind the corruption scandals

Big business demands a corporate Olympics

By Richard Phillips
16 March 1999

The international media, not known in the past for its criticism of the
International Olympic Committee, has over the past six months been the
vehicle for seemingly endless exposures of corruption affecting the
IOC--with each new revelation more damning than its predecessor.

Seven high-level inquiries have been, or are being, held into the Olympic
Games city-bidding process. This includes four US-based probes into the
Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympics; an Australian inquiry (the Sheridan
report) into the Sydney Olympic Games; an investigation in Japan; and the
IOC's own inquiry into the bribery allegations against 30 or more than a
quarter of its delegates.

This month began with the release of the US Olympic Committee Ethics
Panel's probe into the Salt Lake City bid, in which $US1.2 million was paid
to IOC delegates to secure their votes. Headed by former US Senator George
S. Mitchell, the Ethics Panel provided detailed evidence about IOC
delegates who received cash, all-expenses paid travel and accommodation,
luxury gifts, and other bribes.

Mitchell accused the IOC of lacking "ethical control" and tolerating a
culture that was "potentially illegal and inevitably corrupt". The Ethics
Panel said the IOC had been "gravely damaged" and called for reform at
"local, national and international level".

USOC officials responded to the report by urging the White House to
redefine the IOC as a public international organisation and therefore
subject to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The Senate Commerce Committee
announced that it would investigate the Salt Lake City scandal and
suggested that sanctions could be taken against the IOC, including the
removal of its tax-exempt status in the US.

The Ethics Panel report came after a meeting last February between IOC
officials and senior executives from Coca-Cola, Time Warner, McDonalds,
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance and other leading sponsors. The
companies told IOC officials that they could end their sponsorship unless
the IOC reformed its operations.

In a letter to the New York Times and the Sydney Morning Herald, published
after the meeting, David F. D'Allessandro, president of John Hancock,
described the Sydney Olympic Games bidding process as a "clear cut" case of
bribery and denounced the IOC's response as "a classic cover-up".
D'Allessandro said his company would refuse to run any of the $20 million
in advertising budgeted for the TV broadcasts of the 2000 Games, unless the
IOC adopted a radical restructure.

For those who have closely followed the evolution of the Olympic Games, the
IOC nepotism, vote-selling and other forms of corruption now coming to
light is no surprise. They are, in fact, inevitable by-products of the vast
sums of money and multi-million dollar profits surrounding the event.
Moreover, investigative journalists and some serious sports commentators
have reported detailed allegations against the IOC over the years. These
exposures received little publicity, until now.

What has produced this change in attitude? Clearly the sponsors and media
magnates, who have reaped massive profits from the Games, have not suddenly
developed moral objections to the luxurious life-style, under-the-table
payments and lavish gifts provided to IOC delegates. Another agenda is at
work, and one that becomes clear through an examination of the operating
structure of the IOC and the transformation of the Olympic Games into one
of the world's most profitable international sporting events.

The evolution of the Olympics


The IOC was first established in 1894 at an international athletics
conference convened in Paris by Baron Pierre de Coubertin. Members were not
paid but volunteered their services to the IOC, which was structured and
functioned like a private and exclusive gentleman's club.

Operating today under the law of Switzerland, where it is based, the
115-member organisation has more in common with a secret society or Masonic
lodge than a modern global business corporation, let alone a democratic
body elected by and representing the interests of athletes and sports fans.
IOC members are chosen by President Juan Antonio Samaranch and the
11-member Executive Board, not elected by national athletic or sporting
bodies, and can only be removed by the IOC itself.

Those selected before 1966 serve for life. This includes Marc Hodler of
Switzerland and former International Federation of Football Association
president Joao Havelange. Those selected after 1966 retire when they turn
80. The IOC Executive raised the limit from 75 years just before Samaranch
reached that age.

A member breaching the organisation's rather loose rules and guidelines can
be reprimanded under a three-tier disciplinary code: a "Warning", "Serious
Warning" or "Most Serious Warning". Delegates can only be expelled if
fellow members considered their actions unworthy of the organisation.

Samaranch, 78, the son of wealthy Barcelona textile family, has headed the
IOC for the last 19 years. Samaranch joined Spain's fascist movement in his
teens and was appointed that country's Sports Minister by General Franco in
1966. He remained a loyal Francoist until the dictator's death in 1975 and
two years later was made ambassador to Russia--a position he used to
establish contacts with Soviet sporting bureaucrats, thus securing the
votes he needed to be elected IOC president in 1980.

Current IOC members include ex-government sports ministers, retired
military generals, a former defense minister in Ugandan dictator Idi Amin's
regime, an ex-head of the South Korean CIA and a former member of the
Stasi, East Germany's secret police. Prince Albert of Monaco, Britain's
Princess Anne, Prince Faisal Fahd Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia, the crown
prince of the Netherlands and Prince Henri of Luxembourg are members, as is
Boris Yeltsin's former private tennis coach, Shamil Tarpishev. As one
former IOC member described the organisation: "It lives among itself. The
members are like cardinals in the Vatican. Governments come and go, it
doesn't matter to us."

In the late 1960s increasing costs associated with the staging of the
Olympic Games began to produce serious financial problems for the IOC and
those cities staging the international event. The IOC had limited funds and
few, if any of the cities holding the Games made a profit. The 1960 Rome
Olympic Games lost 300 million liras--a pattern repeated on a grander scale
when the 1976 Montreal Olympics lost $1 billion.

But new international players in the form of transnational corporations
began to enter the scene, anxious to use the event to promote their
products or sell advertising space. This coincided with a series of reforms
within the IOC and Samaranch's election to the IOC presidency. With the
backing of major European and US corporations--Adidas, Coca-Cola and most
importantly, giant media and television companies--Samaranch began to
transform the Olympics.

Bound up with the use of the Games to promote national pride, the IOC
previously attempted to maintain the event's amateur status and prevent
commercial sponsorship taking over. Samaranch's predecessor, Avery
Brundage, regularly wrote letters instructing competitors and teams not to
wear company logos on uniforms. He established a "Commission for the
Protection of the Olympic Emblems" to stop the Games being exploited by
advertisers.

After taking office in 1980, Samaranch quickly expanded the organisation's
membership base, appointing IOC delegates who would support opening the
event up to professional athletes and private sponsorship.

In 1981 the Olympics' amateur-only status was watered down when
international sports federations were given the right to determine which
athletes could compete. This is set in motion irresistible
pressures--endorsement dollars and other commercial deals. Then, in 1983,
the IOC voted to open up the Games to company sponsorship. Within a few
years, sponsorship, broadcasting and other advertising rights were being
sold to the highest bidder or at least those closest to Samaranch and the
inner-circle in charge of the IOC.

Multi-million dollar business


After Los Angeles made a $215 million profit from the 1984 Olympic Games by
selling exclusive rights to various corporate sponsorship categories--the
official LA Olympic drink, the official outfitter, etc.--a scramble began
in earnest between cities for the right to host the Games and secure the
profits that could be made in tourism, construction, transport and other
industries.

>From a small, nominally non-profit organisation, the IOC became a
multi-million dollar enterprise, its members determining which cities and
corporations would be granted access to massive profits through the Olympic
Games. And, as competition between companies and cities increased, and
profits climbed, so the opportunities for bribery and corruption rose, not
just of individual members but the IOC as a whole.

Larger and larger inducements were provided to IOC delegates by candidate
cities: furs, jewelry, paintings, first-class travel and accommodation
packages, college tuition fees, jobs for relatives and cash payments. IOC
lobbyists and middlemen were paid handsome fees to deliver delegates'
votes. When the more obvious examples of vote-selling by IOC delegates were
revealed, Samaranch and IOC officials responded with mild rebukes.

At the same time, the cost of sponsorship, television and other deals with
the IOC began to soar. In 1988 nine corporate sponsors paid a total of $100
million for Games marketing rights. Eight years later in 1996 at Atlanta
this had risen to $4 billion.

To purchase a space for the company logo on a sponsor medal stand for the
2002 and 2004 winter and summer Olympics now costs $55 million or 10 times
the amount charged in 1984. Those who pay the price must agree to all the
IOC's rules and restrictions, including prior approval of everything
produced related to the Games--from stationery and pencils to television
and website advertising.

Costs for broadcasting rights have gone through the ceiling--from the �80
paid to the IOC for the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games broadcasting, to NBC's
recent $3.5 billion deal with the IOC for broadcasting rights to all winter
and summer Olympics between 2000 and 2008.

In the late 1980s and early 90s, the media networks and corporations were
prepared to tolerate various IOC indiscretions. Today IOC cronyism and the
prices demanded for broadcasting and sponsorship rights have come into
conflict with the profit expectations of the transnational media and
business corporations.

Furthermore, vote-selling and other under-the-table deals by the IOC have
become so blatant that they are undermining the market value of the Olympic
Games as a "clean and credible" advertising vehicle.

Big business is demanding a new corporate structure in line with its
requirements. In the carefully-framed words of an article published in
Rupert Murdoch's the Australian last month: "The only way forward is to
embrace reform and that means changing management culture to meet the
requirements of a modern corporation that the IOC must become."

Some of changes demanded include lower fees for sponsorship rights,
transparent bidding processes for broadcasting rights and more marketing
opportunities. Other demands include major changes in the city bidding
process, the election of IOC delegates by national Olympic committees and
international sports federations, term limits instead of the
80-years-of-age rule, and the resignation of Samaranch.

If the IOC refuses to comply, the exposures and special investigations will
continue.

Irrespective of how the conflict develops, Olympic Games "reform" has
nothing to do with improving conditions for Olympic Games athletes or
spectators. It will be designed to further corporate interests. Together
with the athletes who compete in them, the Olympic Games have become
commodities bought and sold in the market place--with the aim simply being
the maximisation of private profit.

One glimpse of the possible Olympics of the future was provided by a
proposal from M & M Mars during the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. The company
sought permission for its M & M characters to jump out behind marathon
runners, and appear on prime television, as the athletes passed through
city streets. When the IOC refused, concerned that such crass advertising
could devalue the Games' marketing image, the company dropped its
sponsorship and directed its investment into marketing youth soccer. A Mars
company spokesman complained: "There comes a point where you just don't get
the return on your investment."

See Also:
Sydney revelations deepen Olympics corruption scandal
[30 January 1999]



Top of page


Readers: The WSWS invites your comments. Please send e-mail.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1998-99
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved





~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R

The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved
the absolute rejection of authority. -Thomas Huxley
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.



Reply via email to