Indonesia confident on Asian Games preparations, traffic concerns
remain
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[March 08, 2018]
By Ed Davies and Cindy Silviana
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia is
confident over its readiness to host this year's Asian Games, though
ensuring athletes and fans can get to venues through Jakarta's
traffic-clogged streets remains a challenge, the head of the
country's organizing committee said.
Erick Thohir, an Indonesian businessman and chairman of Italian
soccer club Inter Milan, was brought in to lead the committee in
2015 amid concerns over a ballooning budget and whether some venues
would be prepared in time.
"We are confident we can have the Asian games... now the challenge
is more on transportation issues," Thohir said in an interview at
the committee's Jakarta headquarters as he looked forward to the
Aug. 18-Sept. 2 event.
Indonesia's preparations received a thumbs-up from the Olympic
Council of Asia (OCA) in January following a two-day inspection of
facilities for the first staging of the event in two cities, Jakarta
and Palembang on Sumatra island.
Even so, challenges surfaced during a dress rehearsal event held
last month.
"From the invitation tournament, we have had good feedback about the
food, athletes' villages. Complaints still come from the traffic,"
Thohir added.
Jakarta, consistently ranked as having among the world's worst
traffic congestion, is building a subway in the teeming capital. But
it will not be ready until 2019, so organizers have proposed closing
schools near venues to curb traffic.
Thohir said that toll roads and bus lanes could also be set aside
for special use during the Games.
Around 10,000 athletes from 45 nations are expected to compete
across 40 sports at the Games.
Indonesia was including combat sports such as jujitsu and pencak
silat in the program in a nod to the popularity of mixed martial
arts, said Thohir. Jet ski and paragliding have also been added.
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A labourer works on the construction of the Velodrome track, ahead
of the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia March 5, 2018 in this
photo taken by Antara Foto. Picture taken March 5, 2018. Antara
Foto/Muhammad Adimaja via REUTERS
Thohir said the budget for the Games was now "secured" at 6.6
trillion rupiah ($479 million), down roughly a quarter from an
earlier proposed figure.
This had been achieved by postponing plans for an Asian Youth Games,
renovating existing venues rather than building new ones, and
attracting more sponsorship, he said.
The organizing team had also been limited in size to around the 400s
rather than the usual thousands for such events, while there would
be 13,000 volunteers, he said.
For security, Indonesia would deploy the police and military during
the Games, including having on hand the bomb squad and sniper teams,
said Army Lieutenant General Muhammad Herindra.
The Southeast Asian country last held the Asian Games in 1962 and
Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla said it was important for home
athletes to perform well.
"We finished in 17th place in the last Asian Games in Incheon in
2014. We are aiming to get into the top 10, in order to do that we
will need at least 16 gold medals," Kalla told reporters on
Thursday.
(Additional reporting by Jessica Damiana; Editing by John O'Brien)
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