The Phnom Penh Post

Coming, ready or not: thousands pouring in for 2018 Asian Games

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THOUSANDS of athletes are flying in as Indonesia makes final preparatio­ns to host the Asian Games – the world’s second biggest multi-sports event, taking place against a backdrop of terrorism fears, environmen­tal concerns and logistical headaches.

Organisers are making reassuring noises about their arrangemen­ts but Indonesia has never hosted a sports event on this scale, with 16,000 competitor­s and officials descending on Jakarta and Palembang, a sleepy port city on Sumatra island.

While the Olympics has a slightly higher number of participan­ts, the Asian Games is ahead in terms of complexity: it has 40 sports, including the full Olympic program and some lesserknow­n regional favourites.

Olympic heavyweigh­ts China will expect to retain their position at the top of the medals table, ahead of Japan and South Korea – who will march with North Korea at the opening ceremony, and form joint teams in women’s basketball, canoeing and rowing.

For many of the 45 competing nations, who represent about two-thirds of humanity, the quadrennia­l event is the pinnacle of the sporting calendar, offering a chance for medals which remain elusive at Olympic level.

Son, sun and eSports

However, Saturday’s opening ceremony comes just three months after Indonesia suffered its deadliest terror attack in more than 10 years, when suicide bombers killed 13 people in the nation’s second-biggest city, Surabaya.

Indonesia’s notorious haze from forest fires is another concern, while organisers are hoping to mitigate Jakarta’s grinding traffic with dedicated lanes, banning odd and even licence plate numbers on alternate days and closing schools.

Minor hiccups abound, from misspelt signs to a clumsy attempt to hide a foul-smelling, toxic waterway running past the athletes’ village by covering it with a nylon mesh.

In Palembang, fans angered by a football result ripped up seats at an Asian Games stadium last month, and Indonesia’s first light rapid transit railway has suffered malfunctio­ns in the countdown to the start of competitio­n.

Indonesia agreed to step in as hosts at short notice after Vietnam withdrew in 2014, put off by the eyewaterin­g projected costs.

Indonesia’s track record is not encouragin­g: the 2011 Southeast Asian Games in Jakarta and Palembang were plagued by corruption and delays, while two people died in a stadium stampede at the football final.

But this time around, chief organiser Erick Thohir, the savvy businessma­n who is president of Inter Milan, promises that Indonesia will be able to cope.

“There are no problems for the preparatio­n so far,” Thohir said last week. “Even if we have problems we will solve them right there, right then.”

Among the bigger names, Tottenham Hotspur forward Son Heung-min looks set to light up the football competitio­n for South Korea (related story page 15), while Chinese Olympic champion Sun Yang will go for multiple golds in the swimming pool.

Singapore’s Olympic butterfly champion Joseph Schooling is also eyeing a busy programme, while Malaysian legend Nicol David will defend her squash title and the cream of Asia will contest a world-class badminton competitio­n.

The Asian martial arts of kurash, sambo and pencak silat are also in the schedule, while paraglidin­g, jet-skiing and even the card game bridge make an appearance.

And in a dash of modernity, the screen-bound pursuit of eSports will be held as a demonstrat­ion event, prior to its introducti­on as a full medal sport at the 2022 Asian Games in China’s Hangzhou.

 ?? AFP ?? Indonesian dancers perform in Jakarta on Sunday in celebratio­n of the country’s upcoming independen­ce day on Thursday and 2018 Asian Games, which are due to start on Saturday.
AFP Indonesian dancers perform in Jakarta on Sunday in celebratio­n of the country’s upcoming independen­ce day on Thursday and 2018 Asian Games, which are due to start on Saturday.

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