The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India says no Commonweal­th shambles at U17 World Cup

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CHANGSHA, China: India has promised that this year’s U17 football World Cup will avoid the errors of New Delhi’s 2010 Commonweal­th Games, which were notorious for shoddy facilities and corruption.

Subrata Dutta, a vice-president of the All India Football Federation, said the tournament in October -- the biggest football competitio­n ever held in India -would make the country proud.

“It will be different (from the Commonweal­th Games),” Dutta told AFP at the World Football Forum in Changsha, China.

“I think it will really make us proud and we will be able to give our best.”

The three-week World Cup will be played in six venues -- in New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Goa, Guwahati and Kochi -- with the final in Kolkata on October 28.

India’s reputation as an organiser of big sports events took a dive in 2010, when incomplete infrastruc­ture and poor conditions at the athletes’ village dominated headlines.

Among the worst incidents, a footbridge by the main stadium collapsed days before the opening ceremony, while the swimming competitio­n was affected by murky water and debris falling from the roof. Chief organiser Suresh Kalmadi spent 10 months in jail after being accused of financial irregulari­ties, in one of many corruption cases surroundin­g the Games.

But Dutta said the infrastruc­ture was nearly complete for the World Cup, and that FIFA inspectors arriving in July “will find everything in place”.

“We would give our best to deliver the best ever U17 World Cup. We are working on this for the past two-and-a-half years and we have nearly built up the infrastruc­ture that is required... the finishing touches are on now,” Dutta said.

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