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The
draft bill will still need to be discussed in parliament and could be passed as
early as next spring. It only targets top athletes, supported by state funds
and on the national anti-doping agency's test pool and does not affect
amateurs.
Doctors
or other individuals, procuring the substances, could face jail terms of up to
10 years as the entourage of the athletes is also moved more into focus.
German
sports officials welcomed the tougher sanctions included in the draft, saying
fear of prison would be a major deterrent for doping offenders.
Several
other European nations, including Italy, Spain and France, have already passed
similar laws.
Doping
In Sport Should Be Criminalized (Photo: steroid-use.com)
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"We
are happy that a specific proposal is now on the table," Alfons Hoermann,
head of Germany's Olympic Sports confederation (DOSB) said on Wednesday.
"What the government does is going into the right direction. We welcome
this."
Germany
has had several big name athletes admit to doping or caught using banned
substances in recent year including cyclists Jan Ullrich, Stefan Schumacher as
well as biathlete Evi Sachenbacher-Stehle, who tested positive at this year's
Sochi winter Olympics.
"I
fully support it if we take it seriously," Oliver Bierhoff, team manager
of Germany's national football team told reporters. "It is important for
an athlete to say they have a responsibility and risk going to jail (if they
dope).
"Only
with such drastic measures can we achieve having a clean sport."
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