New Straits Times

HAPPY ENDING IN TALE OF TWO CITIES

IOC prepare Paris, LA award amid graft storm

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THE Internatio­nal Olympic Committee opens a week of highlevel meetings here today, preparing to rubber-stamp the award of the 2024 and 2028 Olympics as the movement battles a fresh wave of corruption revelation­s.

For the first time since the awarding of the 1984 Olympics, the usual frenzy of last-minute lobbying and politickin­g by rival bid cities and heads of state will be strikingly absent in Lima.

In a historic move, the IOC has brokered an agreement that will see Paris handed the 2024 Games with Los Angeles awarded 2028.

IOC members are set to greenlight the deal at a meeting on Wednesday following 25-minute presentati­ons by Paris and Los Angeles, the last two cities left in the initial race for the 2024 Summer Olympics.

The formal ratificati­on of the 2024-2028 deal will mark the end of a mostly good-natured bidding campaign notable for the number of cities who withdrew from the race citing waning public support and concerns over budget.

Hamburg, Rome, Budapest and Boston all fell by the wayside during the competitio­n, reflecting the political difficulti­es in persuading voters that staging the Olympics is worth the multi-billion-dollar price tag.

IOC President Thomas Bach first signalled publicly that the double-award of an Olympics could be on the agenda in December last year, lamenting that the bidding process produced “too many losers.”

As the bidding battle for 2024 unfolded, and as the field thinned to leave Los Angeles and Paris as the last bids standing, the IOC’s determinat­ion to lock in two highqualit­y cities for the next two summer games became apparent.

Los Angeles and Paris, who have slick bids which emphasise a high-level of venue readiness, both wowed the IOC’s Evaluation Commission during back-toback visits in May.

In July, the IOC announced it would award the staging rights for the 2024 and 2028 Olympics at the same meeting in Lima.

With Los Angeles offered financial sweeteners to step aside for Paris in 2024, the fait accompli that will be inked this week was confirmed on July 31.

Bach, who has saluted the deal as a “win-win-win” for the two cities and the Olympic movement, could not hide his delight after arriving in Lima on Thursday for what should be a dramafree meeting.

“It’s a very special, it can be a historic decision,” Bach said.

The cloud hovering over what should be a triumphant week for Bach however comes in the form of more corruption allegation­s which erupted last week and appeared to take the IOC by surprise.

Investigat­ors in Brazil swooped on the country’s Olympics chief Carlos Nuzman, who stands accused of plotting to bribe IOC members into awarding Rio de Janeiro the 2016 Games at a 2009 vote in Copenhagen.

Former IOC member Nuzman was taken in for questionin­g with his passport confiscate­d and a search of his house unearthing around US$150,000 (RM630,000) worth in cash in various currencies.

Brazilian police later said they are probing “an internatio­nal corruption scheme” aimed at “the buying of votes for the election of (Rio) by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee as the venue for the 2016 Olympics.”

The charges swirling around Rio’s bid revive memories of the Salt Lake City bribery scandal, which led to 20 IOC members being either kicked out of the Olympics’ ruling body or pleading guilty to accepting bribes for votes. AFP

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