SPORTS India to bid for 2036 Olympics: sports minister

SPORTS

India to bid for 2036 Olympics: sports minister

AFP

17:27, December 29, 2022

India is planning a bid for the 2036 Olympic Games and will lobby for hosting rights at an International Olympic Committee meeting next year, the country's sports minister has said.

India's Sakshi Malik celebrates after winning against Kirghyzstan's Aisuluu Tynybekova in their women's 58kg freestyle bronze medal match on August 17, 2016, during the wrestling event of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Carioca Arena 2 in Rio de Janeiro. (File photo: CFP)

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has been vying to establish India as a global sporting power and has shovelled money into domestic infrastructure.

Ahmedabad in Modi's home state of Gujarat -- India's candidate for Olympic host city -- is the site of the largest stadium in the world, opened in 2020 and named after the leader.

Sports minister Anurag Thakur told the Times of India newspaper it was the "right time" for his country to pitch for the world's largest sporting event.

"If India is putting in so much effort to promote sports, I can assure you that we will not only host the Olympics, we will host it in a big way," he said in an interview published Wednesday.

Thakur said a roadmap outlining Ahmedabad's pathway to hosting the Games would be presented at an IOC meeting next September in Mumbai with full government backing.

The IOC has already awarded hosting rights for the next three Summer Olympics to Paris, Los Angeles and Brisbane.

If India's bid is successful it will become only the fourth Asian country to host the Games after Japan, South Korea and China.

India previously hosted the Commonwealth Games in 2010 but the event was marred by widespread accusations of corruption and mismanagement.

Several other nations have announced their intention to bid including Indonesia, South Korea and Qatar.

Terms of Service & Privacy Policy

We have updated our privacy policy to comply with the latest laws and regulations. The updated policy explains the mechanism of how we collect and treat your personal data. You can learn more about the rights you have by reading our terms of service. Please read them carefully. By clicking AGREE, you indicate that you have read and agreed to our privacy policies

Agree and continue