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5:43pm Saturday 19th July 2008
British Olympic chiefs will review their lifetime ban on drugs cheats immediately after the Beijing Games despite winning their court case against Dwain Chambers.
The BOA will order a survey of all Olympic athletes for their views on the bylaw after the Games, but the organisation's chairman Lord Moynihan insisted Friday's ruling enforcing a lifetime Olympic ban on the disgraced sprinter would strengthen their resolve to keep the rule.
Moynihan said: "We will ask the British Athletes Commission, which is independent of us, to undertake a survey on the bylaw after Beijing.
"This verdict has strengthened our resolve that it's the right approach but we also want to make sure we are reflecting the athletes' wishes.
"I don't believe this will change that bylaw but we need to keep it under review."
Moynihan said a previous survey had shown 90% of the athletes were in favour of the BOA's ban for serious drugs cheats.
The sprinter lost his bid to run in Beijing after the High Court refused to grant an injunction temporarily suspending the lifetime ban.
But judge Mr Justice Mackay also said: "Many people both inside and outside sport would see this bylaw as unlawful.
"In my judgment, it would take a much better case than the claimant has presented to persuade me to overturn the status quo at this stage and compel his selection for the Games."
The International Olympic Committee last month toughened their rules so any athlete being banned for six months or more for a doping offence would miss the next Games after their ban has ended.
All the top tip columns make being green sound so easy: just change your light bulbs, walk to the shops and do your recycling, but it never really works out like that. SARAH LEWIS turns agony aunt and answers some of your pressing eco-questions.
When the new NHS dental contract was introduced, large numbers of dentists left the NHS and focused on private patients.
Woolworths, one of the best-known names on the British high street, has been put into administration with £385 million of debt. As company bosses and administrators Deloitte wrestle with the task of rescuing the business, RICHARD GURNER takes a look back at the company’s history in Sussex and asks business leaders what needs to be done to revive its fortunes.
From the village of Horsted Keynes, this walk heads eastwards to encircle the nearby settlement of Danehill, crossing and recrossing two well-wooded valleys before returning along part of the Sussex Border Path, a longdistance walking route which sticks fairly closely to the boundary between East and West Sussex.
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