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Sports opening new opps for dialogue among nations, says Gul

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  • Sports opening new opps for dialogue among nations, says Gul

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 22 2008


    Sports opening new opportunities for dialogue among nations, says
    President Gül


    Making the opening remarks of the 37th general assembly of the
    European Olympic Committees (EOC) on Friday, Turkish President
    Abdullah Gül said sports offered an ideal opportunity for laying the
    groundwork for dialogue among nations.


    "I had the chance to visit Armenia for the first time, and a sports
    event gave me this opportunity. It was the best example of sports
    creating new grounds for dialogue among nations. Games are one of the
    oldest and most important driving forces of friendly and peaceful
    relations among countries and their nations," he said in his address
    to the gathering.
    The 37th general assembly of the EOC began in Ä°stanbul on the
    centenary of the founding of Turkey's National Olympic Committee
    (TMOK). The two-day meeting at Ä°stanbul's Hilton Exhibition Center
    brings together delegations from national Olympic committees (NOCs) of
    Europe, numerous sports federations and a great number of the
    International Olympic Committee (IOC) members.

    EOC President Patrick Hickey and Secretary-General Raffaele Pagnozzi
    as well as IOC President Jacques Rogge are among participants of the
    event giving the candidate cities for the 2016 Olympic Games a last
    opportunity to meet the European delegates. During the meeting, the
    four cities vying for the 2016 Summer Games got the chance to make
    their case to the regional group with the most influence in the
    Olympic movement.

    Chicago, Tokyo, Madrid and Rio de Janeiro made presentations to the
    general assembly of the European Olympic Committees (EOC), which
    represents 50 countries and holds the balance of power in the Olympic
    world.

    "Most important, the audience of 500 delegates is expected to include
    between 20 and 25 voting members of the IOC," EOC President Hickey
    said.

    It's also the first bid presentations since the election of former
    Illinois Sen. Barack Obama as US president, a potential major boost to
    the bid from his hometown of Chicago. A video message from Obama,
    taped since his election victory was included in Chicago's 20-minute
    delivery.

    The full IOC will select the host city in a secret ballot in
    Copenhagen on Oct. 2, 2009. But the campaign is already in full swing
    as the cities prepare to submit their final bid documents to the IOC
    in February. The cities made recent presentations to regional Olympic
    groups in Acapulco and Bali, but the European meeting offers by far
    the biggest chance yet for the candidates to get their message out to
    key constituents.

    IOC President Rogge, a Belgian and former head of the European body,
    will be among those attending. More than a third of the IOC's 100-plus
    members are from Europe. The cities that have brought high-level
    delegations to Ä°stanbul are out to impress the delegates with video
    presentations and promises that they will offer financially secure
    bids that can weather the current global financial crisis.

    Obama's election has changed the dynamics of the race. US President
    George W. Bush's unpopularity around the world was reflected in
    Olympic politics, with New York soundly defeated in its bid for the
    2012 Games and US influence declining in the IOC. Obama has been a
    high-profile backer of the Chicago bid and lives a few blocks from the
    planned 2016 Olympic stadium. He delivered his acceptance speech
    before huge crowds in Grant Park, which is at the heart of the
    proposed Olympic venues.

    "President-elect Obama's election has put a bright spotlight on
    Chicago," bid leader Patrick Ryan said Thursday. "The fact that he is
    managing the transition from Chicago continues to put a spotlight on
    Chicago, and we look forward to his continued support." The Chicago
    2016 committee is counting on Obama to attend next year's IOC meeting
    in Copenhagen to personally push for the bid. Chicago's rivals are
    adjusting to the Obama factor. Rio is even using his "Yes, we can" and
    time-for-change slogan as an example of why the Olympics should go to
    Brazil and South America for the first time.

    "We also have a need for change in the Olympic movement," Rio bid
    president and Brazilian Olympic Committee chief Carlos Nuzman
    said. "The Olympic movement needs to go to all regions of the
    world. South America is home to 400 million people, and one-third are
    young people. The Olympic movement is ready for a historic change."
    Rio, which hosted the 2007 Pan American Games, says Brazil will have
    the world's fifth-largest economy by 2016.

    Madrid, which finished third behind winner London and Paris in the
    vote for the 2012 Olympics, portrayed the Spanish capital Thursday as
    the "safest choice for 2016" in light of the economic downturn. Bid
    officials said 77 percent of the venues are ready, the candidacy is 90
    percent toward its funding goal, the project is entirely underwritten
    by the government, and city streets are "safe ... day and night."
    Tokyo, which hosted the 1964 Olympics and has rated highly in IOC
    technical evaluations, said the Japanese government's $100 billion
    loan to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) showed how the games
    would be financially secure.

    22 November 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL
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