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Thanh Nien
 

Chief Editor : Mr. Nguyen Quang Thong
Managing Deputy Editor: Mr. Dang Thanh Tinh
248 Cong Quynh St . , Distr. 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Tel: 84 8 8 394 046
Fax: 84 8 8 322 025

Thanh Nien is the tribune of Vietnam’s Youth Association

Publication permit No. 14/GP-BC, granted by Press Department, Vietnam Ministry of Culture and Information.

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Vietnam ready to host its biggest sporting event
A street vendor walks past a billboard featuring the up-coming 3rd Asian Indoor Games in Hanoi.
Vietnam hosts its biggest-ever sporting event from Friday when thousands of regional athletes gather for the third Asian Indoor Games, and it has high hopes of putting on a successful show.

Despite the challenge of finding sponsors during the global financial crisis, organisers said everything was in place for the opening ceremony at My Dinh National Stadium – the only event taking place outdoors.

"We have a chance to promote our country, our people," said Hoang Vinh Giang, secretary general of Vietnam's Olympic committee.

The government has invested more than US$100 million in the project, about one-third of which paid for the new Indoor Athletics Palace, Giang told AFP.

Other venues being used were built when the country hosted the Southeast Asian Games six years ago.

They have been upgraded for this year's competition which Giang said will see about 5,000 athletes, coaches and managers from some 40 countries and regions.

Before the closing ceremony on November 8, they will have participated in more than 20 sports ranging from traditional athletics to regional specialties like Central Asian kurash, as well as less conventional disciplines like lion dancing and computer games.

With such a diverse agenda, the Asian Indoor Games give a wider group of athletes a chance at competition, said Wei Jizhong, sports adviser to the president of the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA).

Most events will take place in Vietnam's capital Hanoi and surrounding provinces. Others are scheduled for the southern commercial centre of Ho Chi Minh City.

"They are ready," Wei said when asked about Vietnam's preparedness.

Giang said that preparations began two years ago but the hardest part was finding sponsors among companies reluctant to advertise during the global financial crisis, although they some were onboard now.

The organizing committee must also refund $1 million to the government with money raised through its marketing activities, he added.

"Now we think we can get more than $2 million," he said.

Wei, the OCA presidential adviser, said he had no financial concerns about the games because they were fully-backed by the government.

The hosts are expected to field the largest team, likely more than 500, followed by Thailand with about 420.

Further from home, Iran is sending a team of 367 while 130 will come from war-devastated Iraq.

Tiny Bhutan's six-member squad will be the smallest.

Giang, a veteran organizer in Vietnam's sporting scene, said he was very satisfied with the international participation, and hopes for big things from the home team.

"We expect to get from about 15 to 20 gold medals," he said.

That would be a major leap from the last Indoor Games in Macau two years ago when Vietnam won 18 medals overall, including two gold.

Giang forecasts about six Vietnam golds in the homegrown sport of vovinam, a combination of traditional martial arts and wrestling. He sees other wins in pencak silat and wushu, a fighting sport.

This expected strong performance should help generate public interest, which has been lacking.

"If I have time, and money, maybe I will come to watch some sports," said Tran Quang Lam, 28, a construction worker who usually pays watches football.

Lam had heard of the Games but others seemed disinterested despite publicity on television, newspapers and banners.

"It seems to be not very big, right?" said a lottery ticket vendor who would not give her name. "I don't hear many people talking about it."

This will be the last Asian Indoor Games in their current form. In future they will be combined with the Asian Martial Arts Games.

Source: AFP

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