3 June 2019

International Athlete Community calls for National Olympic Committees to follow Germany’s lead in relaxing restrictive ‘Rule 40’ 

• International Athlete community calls for National Olympic Committees to follow Germany’s lead and relax the International Olympic Committee’s restrictive ‘Rule 40’ so that athletes’ marketing and commercial rights are liberated.
• Anti-Doping Leaders from Asia, Oceania, North America and Europe commit to implement athlete rights in national anti-doping policy.
• Leading athletes joined the top names in anti-doping at Global Athlete Meeting in show of solidarity for Clean Sport Movement.
• Athletes also discussed the emergence of Global Athlete and the resulting shift towards greater athlete representation and rights within sports governance; stressing the need for a meaningful place around the decision-making table, the opportunity to be seen as equals alongside administrators and the ability to voice views without the fear of retribution.

The international athlete community today gathered in Oslo, Norway and made a unanimous call for the world’s National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to follow Germany’s lead by relaxing the restrictive International Olympic Committee ‘Rule 40’ so that athletes’ marketing and commercial rights can be liberated and “brought into line with the rights and modern norms athletes have come to expect in the digital age”.

The athlete community has been galvanised by a successful recent ruling in Germany that paved the way for German athletes to use the period of the Olympic Games to market themselves, endorse sponsors that have helped them reach the pinnacle of their careers and express themselves freely on social media, using terms such as ‘gold’, ‘silver’, ‘bronze’ and ‘medal’ which until now had been restricted by the IOC’s long-established Rule 40.

Athletes also discussed the emergence of Global Athlete and the resulting shift towards greater athlete representation and rights within sports governance. Participants at the meeting stressed the need for athletes to have a meaningful place around the decision-making table and to be treated as equals alongside administrators with regards to the rules that are made and that impact their daily careers. The participants also encouraged sports governing bodies and anti-doping organizations to strengthen the athlete voice, for their views to be voiced without the fear of retribution and for mechanisms to be put in place to support athletes that do speak up.

The athlete community and anti-doping leaders also convened a joint Meeting that pledged to continue to work together to further the fight against doping and restore trust. The anti-doping leaders of ten nations joined athletes from twelve countries in Oslo as, together, they pledged to keep putting athlete rights at the heart of clean sport policy. In a first for anti-doping, a series of athlete rights (previously included within The WADA Anti-Doping Charter of Athlete Rights) will now be fully implemented as best practice by the world’s leading Anti-Doping Organizations.

The athletes will convene again tomorrow, for the World Forum for Ethics in Business Conference held in partnership with Anti-Doping Norway and FairSport. The Conference will see high-profile figures meet to discuss how athletes, sports, sponsors and broadcasters can work more together to ensure greater accountability for clean and ethical sport. Participants include: the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) Vice President, Linda Helleland; four-time Olympic Gold medalist and FairSport Founder, Johann Koss; and Chief Sports Writer of British newspaper The Sunday Times, David Walsh.

Olympic and Paralympic athletes from the following countries and sports participated at the Meeting:

Country Sport
Australia Swimming
Austria Athletics – Long distance
Bulgaria Biathlon
Czech Republic Badminton
Denmark Athletics and Triathlon
France Fencing
Ireland Rugby Union 7s
Japan Athletics – Hammer throw
Norway Ski Orienteering
Netherlands Athletics – Decathlon
UK Cycling
USA Skelton and Bobsleigh

The following National Anti-Doping Organizations attended the meeting:

Country NADO
Norway Anti-Doping Norway
UK UK Anti-Doping
Japan Japan Anti-Doping Agency
France French Anti-Doping Agency
United States US Anti-Doping Agency
Ireland Sport Ireland
Denmark Anti-Doping Denmark
United States US Anti-Doping Agency
Australia Australian Anti-Doping Agency

• This media release was published via email by Global Athlete on 3 June 2019.

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