| 2018 Commonwealth Games: Sri Lanka or Australia. Who will get it? |
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| Written by News TM | |
| Friday, 11 November 2011 11:57 | |
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When the vote is taken in St Kitts today on who will host the 2018 Commonwealth Games, the result will have vastly different consequences for the two competing countries.
If Australia’s Gold Coast gets the nod it will confirm the country’s reputation as one of the world’s sporting leaders.
But should the decision got to Hambantota in Sri Lanka, it will mean a massive investment in infrastructure and jobs as well as providing a positive spotlight on a country that is slowly emerging from a 26-year-long civil war.
The stakes are very high indeed, with some estimates of possible commercial activity in the region of £2bn.
Hambantota was devastated by the 2004 tsunami, and the Sri Lankan government has committed to spending about 60 per cent of the required $1.71bn needed to build the necessary infrastructure.
When Manchester hosted the Games in 2002, the city’s council said they generated £600m of public investment, 6,300 full time jobs, a £22m boost to local business and 300,000 extra visitors to the city.
As a legacy, the stadium was then leased to Premiership football club Manchester City.
On top of that, it claimed that the city was then catapulted to second in the UK tourism league table.
And Sri Lanka wants some of that action. Ajith Nivard Cabraal, co-chairman of the Hambantota 2018 bid team and Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, said that hosting the Commonwealth Games is an integral part of the country's plan to rebuild a unified nation.
The responsibility for selecting the host city for 2018 rests with the 71 member Commonwealth Games Associations (CGAs). Glasgow will host the 20th Commonwealth Games between 23 July and 3 August 2014.
© 2011 gtglobaltrader
When the vote is taken in St Kitts today on who will host the 2018 Commonwealth Games, the result will have vastly different consequences for the two competing countries.If Australia’s Gold Coast gets the nod it will confirm the country’s reputation as one of the world’s sporting leaders.
But should the decision got to Hambantota in Sri Lanka, it will mean a massive investment in infrastructure and jobs as well as providing a positive spotlight on a country that is slowly emerging from a 26-year-long civil war.
The stakes are very high indeed, with some estimates of possible commercial activity in the region of £2bn.
Hambantota was devastated by the 2004 tsunami, and the Sri Lankan government has committed to spending about 60 per cent of the required $1.71bn needed to build the necessary infrastructure.
When Manchester hosted the Games in 2002, the city’s council said they generated £600m of public investment, 6,300 full time jobs, a £22m boost to local business and 300,000 extra visitors to the city.
As a legacy, the stadium was then leased to Premiership football club Manchester City.
On top of that, it claimed that the city was then catapulted to second in the UK tourism league table.
And Sri Lanka wants some of that action. Ajith Nivard Cabraal, co-chairman of the Hambantota 2018 bid team and Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, said that hosting the Commonwealth Games is an integral part of the country's plan to rebuild a unified nation.
The responsibility for selecting the host city for 2018 rests with the 71 member Commonwealth Games Associations (CGAs). Glasgow will host the 20th Commonwealth Games between 23 July and 3 August 2014.
© 2011 gtglobaltrader
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