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India to host 2032 Olympics in Mumbai

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Any updates on this? What progress has India made?

P.S. This is not a duplicate thread. I opened it to get updates.


http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/india-to-host-2032-olympics-in-mumbai/1/331024.html

India to host 2032 Olympics in Mumbai
Plans for mega infrastructure development of host city Mumbai is set in motion.
Kunal Vijayakar
olympics1_121313114604.jpg

It was meant to be too close to call. One of the closest races the International Olympic Committee had ever voted on, a choice between some of the most eligible cities in the world. But last night, Mumbai won a crushing victory over Washington DC, Durban and Istanbul to win the right to stage the 2032 Olympic Games.

The pitch was conceived, presented and created on behalf of IOA and the sports ministry by sports management giant Kaldix International. Kaldix is a testament to privatisation in India and is co-owned by Kalmadi and Dikshit, the grandchildren of Suresh Kalmadi and Sheila Dikshit. That apart, Mumbai celebrated this win with unusual fervour. Jubilant fans flooded the streets and shops stayed open till late, allowing an evening of celebration.

In a goodwill gesture, Maharashtra's longest reigning Home Minister, R.R. Patil, relaxed the night-time curfew and allowed restaurants and bars to remain open way beyond the compulsory closing time of 7.30 p.m.

An impromptu concert was held to celebrate the win. The highlight was the performance of a new band featuring Amar-Akbar-Anthony, the three sons of Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy. The trio was accompanied by an exuberant Asha Bhosle, who holds the world record for 'The youngest singer in a sari'. She is a few years away from her next record, of 'The youngest singer in a wheelchair'. The concert was attended by Bollywood royalty. Amitabh Bachchan came straight from the set of his show Kaun Banega Crorepati-Chatwarinsh (40th). Salman arrived fresh from the success of Dabangg-12, and spoke of his plans for Dabangg-13, saying it would be unlike any Salman film ever made. It will have a writer and a director.

As the sun rises the next day, the hunt for a site to host the Games will begin in earnest. IOA has requested the state government for land. But land is scarce in Mumbai. Veteran politician Sharad Pawar has offered to reclaim all the city's beaches to create 800 to 1,000 acres, by extending the city westwards into the Arabian Sea. This would have a threefold advantage. First, there would be more real estate. Second, Mumbai would be closer to Dubai, which could be made accessible by a sea link he would build at a cost that could escalate at Rs 3,000 crore per day. And finally, India's western coast would become difficult to infiltrate, as Mumbai would be further away from Karachi.

Other Mumbai politicians have suggested clearing Asia's largest slum, Dharavi, to make way for the Games. Dharavi is a 500-acre real estate in the city's centre that houses 60,000 structures, 1,000,000 people, and is a hive of workshops with an annual turnover of over $1 billion. The Opposition has objected to shifting a million people to house 10,000 athletes, and suggested an alternative. Another piece of real estate in south Mumbai, which can not only house 10,000 athletes but also host all equestrian, track, aquatic and outdoor events, by dislodging just four people who live on a property called Antilla.

In preparation for the event, a larger airport is being planned. Mumbai's current airport is in densely-populated Sahar. A new airport has been mooted where space and security is not a problem. Taking a page out of Bangalore and Hyderabad, a site is being sought outside city limits. The only vacant land on Mumbai's outskirts is in Rann of Kutch, 1,215 km away. All international travellers will land and clear immigration at a spanking new airport near Bhuj and then drive for 19 hours to reach the city. Not bad, considering that it is just a couple of hours more than what it usually takes to get to Mumbai's airport on a normal day.

Which brings me to cost. It is going to be huge. But the city is not worried. IOA has assured us that between sponsorships, government funding and private investors, there will be sufficient money to build infrastructure of international standards, beautify the city, and still have spare change to send to Geneva. There is only one problem. There may be no money left to train India's athletes.

- Kunal Vijayakar is an actor, director and TV host
 
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Just another example of fake news from Indian media, they haven't even done the bidding for the 2024 let alone 2032
 
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India hosting the Olympics? I'll believe it when I see it. :rofl:
 
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Has everyone forgotten the Indian fiasco of the Commonwealth games? LOL!

This is what India did the last time they hosted an International event of a large size.

http://www.thenational.ae/news/world/south-asia/commonwealth-games-fiasco-wounds-indias-pride


Commonwealth Games fiasco wounds India's pride
Eric Randolph

October 2, 2010
When Britain's Prince Charles declares the Commonwealth Games open tomorrow night, India will hope it marks the end of an unprecedented period of international embarrassment.

For the next 11 days New Delhi will host an estimated 6,700 athletes and officials from the former British Empire, with 71 teams competing in 17 sports. But what began seven years ago as an opportunity to showcase India's new-found status as a global power has gradually soured into a very public display of all that is wrong in the Indian political system.

From chronic delays, massive corruption and collapsing infrastructure, to terrorist attacks, outbreaks of disease and international condemnation of faeces-smeared rooms - it has sometimes felt like a conspiracy by the Delhi authorities to systematically eviscerate India's dignity. Where the stories have been most damaging is for India's obsessive tendency to compare itself with China. Right to the end, Suresh Kalmadi, the head of the Games' organising committee, has been telling anyone who will listen that facilities will be "better than the Beijing Olympics", apparently unaware of the chaos.

Barely mentioned is the fact that China is preparing to host another mega-event in just a month's time. The Asian Games, which is a considerably larger event than the Commonwealth Games, will take place in Guangzhou in November. Preparations at the city's 58 new or refurbished venues have apparently been running smoothly and finishing touches are being applied weeks ahead of the first arrivals. So what went wrong for India? It is not as if its capital is unaccustomed to large-scale events. In fact, it has twice hosted the Asian Games with considerable success.

"Delhi has many centuries of tradition of staging huge pageants and events," said Sam Miller, author of Delhi: Adventures in a Megacity."The durgas of the British period and the huge festivals of the Mughal period have made this a city that is almost famous for spectacle." But he says the attitude with which these Games were approached almost destined them to failure. "Many elite Indians kidded themselves that all this stuff about India roaring out of poverty was true. When the bid was made, there was this obsessional phrase 'India Shining' and everyone got caught up in that.

"As soon as you try to be the best in the world, you have to spend desperately over-the-top sums of money. The way it was organised meant it became a huge money-making racket for a lot of people." The first clear indications of the scale of the corruption emerged in July, with a report by the Central Vigilance Commission that examined 15 construction sites and found widespread evidence of inflated prices, poor quality work and doctored safety certificates. Many more cases of over-spending soon emerged, popular examples being the purchase of US$80 (Dh294) toilet rolls and $61 soap dispensers. Officials have denied all cases of corruption, but numerous cases are expected to emerge in court once the Games are over.

Beyond individual cases of corruption is the question of whether a sporting event was really the most pressing need for a city like Delhi. "This sort of development does nothing to address the real issues of Delhi," said Sanjay Kaul, head of People's Action, an activist group seeking better living conditions for the city's poor. "This city is incapable of catering to the basic needs of its people - health, housing, drainage, water. How can they dare to spend these huge sums of money on a few stadiums that will only end up being used for wedding parties."
 
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Will we ever live to see India hosting the Olympics? In the meantime Indians will have to do with fantasizing i'm afraid or make another Bollywood production. The grand display of superpower 2030 wasn't enough, i want more of it.
 
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No thanks to upset stomach

Where is the 100 meter top athelete ?

A: He is in toilet can't compete
 
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Not happening...it is too costly to host Olympics in India
 
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will the audience have to watch people openly defecating ?
 
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I will welcome if India host 2032 olympics. I guess by that time Indian economy should be around $10 trillion. So India should have the capability to host such an event
 
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