Singapore is really reaching out for the stars...where will I be? Vancouver or Singapore, that's the question. Let's see how things go...
Singapore will host the first Youth Olympic Games in 2010.
The Southeast Asian city-state of 4.5 million people beat out Moscow in a vote of the International Olympic Committee. The result was announced Thursday by IOC president Jacques Rogge during a ceremony at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland.
In a postal ballot of IOC members, Singapore defeated the Russian capital 53-44.
Singapore has never hosted a major international multi-sports event but held a sentimental edge over Moscow. The IOC was eager to reward a city that might never be able to stage the full Olympics.
"We dared to dream, we worked hard to pursue our dream despite the odds, and now the dream will become a reality," Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said.
The Youth Games will feature about 3,200 athletes aged 14-18 competing in 26 sports. The event, to be held every four years, is designed to encourage youngsters to get involved in sports and spend less time in front of computer and television screens. The first Winter Youth Olympics will be in 2012.
"It's a great honor and privilege for all of us, for Singapore and every Singaporean," Lee said. "For the first time, the 'Olympics' name will be in Southeast Asia, and in Singapore. We will be the focus of a new era of sports development for Singapore, for Southeast Asia and for the Olympic movement."
Lee spoke at a public gathering in Singapore that included about 5,000 students from 90 schools, most of whom were decked out in red and were assembled at a large field in front of the downtown City Hall to listen to the result from Lausanne.
"We worked very hard for seven months," Lee said. "It was a national effort, but more than that, it was a people's effort.… Now, the countdown to 2010 begins. We have 2½ years to prepare for the Youth Olympic Games. It's going to be challenging, but it's going to be full of excitement and achievements."
Moscow hosted the 1980 Olympics, and Russia's Black Sea resort of Sochi was picked last year to stage the 2014 Winter Games.
Singapore, with a games budget of $75 million, will use 24 venues, including one large cluster for 13 sports. Nineteen of the venues already exist, four would be built as temporary facilities and one is under construction for equestrian.
Singapore and Moscow made the final list after the elimination of Athens, Greece; Bangkok, Thailand; Turin, Italy; Debrecen, Hungary; Guatemala City; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; and Poznan, Poland.
"The Youth Olympic Games are the flagship of the IOC's determination to reach out to young people," Rogge said. "These games will not only be about competition. They will also be the platform through which youngsters will learn about the Olympic values and the benefits of sport, and will share their experiences with other communities around the globe."
Source: The Associated Press
http://www.cbc.ca/sports/amateur/story/2008/02/21/world-youth-olympics.html
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