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Beijing Defeats Almaty in Bid to Host 2022 Winter Olympics Beijing Defeats Almaty in Bid to Host 2022 Winter Olympics
(about 2 hours later)
Beijing was awarded the hosting rights to the 2022 Winter Olympics on Friday, setting up the Chinese capital to become the first city in history to stage both the Summer and Winter Games. One of the strangest Olympic bidding races in recent memory came to a surprising end Friday when Beijing, which staged the Summer Games seven years ago, was awarded the rights to the 2022 Winter Games, setting up the Chinese capital to become the first city to host both versions of the Games in more than a century of Olympic history.
Members of the International Olympic Committee, which is holding its annual congress in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, voted in favor of Beijing over its lone competitor, Almaty, Kazakhstan. The outcome was 44 to 40, a margin that was far smaller than many observers had predicted given the success of the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing and the relative anonymity of Almaty in the sporting community. Voting was conducted with traditional paper ballots after electronic devices failed. Beijing’s victory was not the stunning part; given the commercial success of the 2008 Games, it was seen as a heavy favorite. What resonated was Beijing’s tiny margin of victory over the upstart bid from Almaty, Kazakhstan.
“This will be a memorable event at the foot of the Great Wall for the whole Olympic family,” organizers for Beijing’s bid said in a statement afterward. Beijing received 44 votes from International Olympic Committee delegates while Almaty received 40, a strong total indicating just how conflicted voters were over whether to give the Games to a country with plenty of resources but virtually zero winter sports history or send them to Central Asia for the first time in a still-developing former Soviet republic.
While many nations, including the United States, have hosted both the Summer and Winter Games, no single city had been able to convince the International Olympic Committee that it had the requisite infrastructure, financial resources and climate necessary to pull off such a double. Ultimately, the voters opted for familiarity even if it may end up costing the event some authenticity. While Almaty’s bid highlighted the abundant mountains and plentiful snow that surround the city, Beijing’s plan relies on an extensive artificial snow-making operation and a new high-speed train project that, organizers said, will link the city with clusters of sites in the mountains as far as 90 miles away.
Beijing, it should be noted, did not necessarily do that either. But it won over the delegates with an elaborate plan that uses some well-known venues from the Summer Games, including the Bird’s Nest stadium and the Water Cube arena, in addition to relying on an intricate snow-making operation to account for the fact that its surrounding region has few mountains and, generally, little actual snow. “It really is a safe choice,” Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee, said. “We know China will deliver on its promises.”
Beijing presented the 2022 Games as a catalyst to help develop the mostly dormant interest in winter sports among the 300 million people in northern China. China has already created a special program, said to have cost roughly $30 million, that is intended to produce athletes in sports with little history in the country, like Nordic combined skiing and the sliding sports of luge, skeleton and bobsled. Some I.O.C. voters who are generally sports executives from countries around the world also may have been thinking of nonsporting factors when they cast their votes. David Wallechinsky, president of the International Society of Olympic Historians, was in the room for the final bid presentations and said in a telephone interview: “Forty-four people voted for Beijing, but what are their motivations? A large number of the voters represent countries who don’t even take part in the Winter Olympics.”
“Summer or Winter Games, they all represent the Olympic ideals,” Yao Ming, the N.B.A. star who retired in 2011, said at a news conference before the vote. “It’s the right time, the perfect time, for the Olympics to return to Beijing.” Mr. Wallechinsky, who is not a voter, added: “So, the logistics for the athletes or the fans in terms of getting to venues may not be a big factor for them. Their agendas may have been very different. They may be thinking about how voting for China could help them down the road or how a few weeks in Beijing may be more preferable to a few weeks in Almaty.”
At the Olympic Green in Beijing, the site of the 2008 Olympics, hundreds gathered to celebrate the announcement. Many waved giant Chinese flags, and dancers in red robes performed to traditional songs. Certainly Beijing’s status as a tourist destination was a factor. Glitz, money, experience and a seven-foot former basketball star in a comedic turn were the key components to Beijing’s presentation to the I.O.C. voters, as the Chinese bid highlighted its memorable staging of the 2008 Summer Games.
“Winning the bid will surely make more people know about China, that we are a major power now, and we are no worse than the United States,” said Zhang Zhaoshi, 76, a retiree, as he opened a bottle of Chinese wine at his home in Beijing to celebrate. “The victory will surely allow us Chinese to speak more confidently in the world.” Yao Ming, the former N.B.A. center, played a hockey goalie during a video that was played for voters, and bid officials emphasized how Beijing had shown itself to be an important partner with the Olympic movement after spending at least $40 billion to host the Games previously. Mr. Wallechinsky said he perceived some observers as being disgusted by the presentation. “It was basically: ‘Last time we held the Olympics we earned a billion dollars. So you should vote for us,’ he said. But many others were surely swayed by the possibility of increased exposure to winter sports for some 300 million people in northern China.
China has created a special program, said to have cost about $30 million, that is intended to produce athletes in sports with little history in the country, like Nordic combined skiing and the sliding sports of luge, skeleton and bobsled.
Beijing plans to use some of its venues from the Summer Games, including the Bird’s Nest stadium and the Water Cube arena. At the Olympic Green on Friday, hundreds of people gathered to celebrate the announcement. People waved giant Chinese flags, and dancers in red robes performed traditional songs.
“Winning the bid will surely make more people know about China, that we are a major power now, and we are no worse than the United States,” said Zhang Zhaoshi, 76. “The victory will surely allow us Chinese to speak more confidently in the world.”
Some Beijing residents said they looked forward to cleaner air now that the government would face international pressure to improve the environment. Others said they thought the flood of tourists and investment would help improve the local economy, which has slowed recently.Some Beijing residents said they looked forward to cleaner air now that the government would face international pressure to improve the environment. Others said they thought the flood of tourists and investment would help improve the local economy, which has slowed recently.
But the celebration seemed somewhat muted compared with the euphoria of 2001, when it was announced that Beijing had won its bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics. But the celebration seemed somewhat muted compared with the euphoria of 2001, when it was announced that Beijing had won its bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics. Part of that is almost certainly because of Beijing’s less-than-wintry climate.
“We are not that enthusiastic about it because it is not the Summer Olympics but only the Winter Olympics,” said Wu Xiaowen, 46, an accountant in Beijing. “We don’t play or watch those games.”“We are not that enthusiastic about it because it is not the Summer Olympics but only the Winter Olympics,” said Wu Xiaowen, 46, an accountant in Beijing. “We don’t play or watch those games.”
Beijing plans to stage the so-called city events hockey, figure skating and speed skating downtown, while the sliding and skiing events will be held at venues in Yanqing, about 40 miles outside Beijing, and in Zhangjiakou, which is about 90 miles away. Almaty, on the other hand, has little experience hosting big events, but it does have plenty of nearby mountains. Almaty, which is a commercial hub in oil-rich Kazakhstan, tried to position itself as the opposite to what it suggested was Beijing’s manufactured bid Almaty’s slogan was, pointedly, “Keeping It Real” — and the former Kazakh capital cited the compact nature of its city. During its bid videos, there were many images of deep snow.
A planned high-speed rail line to Zhangjiakou is supposed to cut travel time to less than an hour, though Chinese organizers no doubt wary of the International Olympic Committee’s renewed sensitivity to skyrocketing Olympic budgets have said repeatedly that the rail project should be seen as separate from the Olympic bid. All of the venues in Almaty, organizers said, would have been within an 18-mile radius, and 70 percent of the necessary venues were in place before the vote. Kazakhstan’s prime minister, Karim Massimov, gave a stirring final speech for the bid in which he exhorted voters to “have faith in us” and to view Almaty as “a golden opportunity to prove that smaller, advancing nations can successfully host the Winter Games.”
Either way, there is no denying that Beijing’s hosting model involves multiple venue clusters with significant distance between them. Almaty, on the other hand, had tried to position itself as the opposite to what it suggested was Beijing’s manufactured bid Almaty’s slogan was, pointedly, “Keeping It Real” and the former Kazakh capital cited the compact nature of its city. It also frequently noted that its nearby mountains were covered with genuine snow. A crowd of several hundred, mostly students and government workers, awaited the decision Friday on a warm afternoon outside the Republic Palace in Almaty. After watching the announcement of Beijing’s victory on a large screen, the crowd was mostly silent before quickly dispersing.
All the venues in Almaty, organizers said, would have been within an 18-mile radius, and 70 percent of the necessary sites were in place before the vote, allowing the Almaty infrastructure bid to be based around a total budget of $6 billion. Beijing’s budget is expected to be much larger, although its organizers repeatedly stated that the combined costs were about $3 billion a figure that does not include, for example, the cost of the high-speed rail line. Bid organizers said it was likely that Almaty would try to win the rights to a future Games, but Kazakhstan only gained its independence in 1991 and its citizens were divided on whether hosting an Olympics was a wise move for a nation that is still developing in so many ways.
A crowd of several hundred, mostly students and government workers, awaited the decision on Friday on a warm afternoon outside the Republic Palace in Almaty. After watching the announcement of Beijing’s victory on a large screen, the crowd was mostly silent before quickly dispersing. “The Olympic Games are not for us,” Sagyn Ayimbetova, 40, who has lived in Almaty for 26 years, said afterward. “It would be a hit for our budget and we would lose so much money. I was afraid our economy would fall down after the Games. So I am happy the committee made a good choice.”
A former part of the Soviet Union, Kazakhstan only gained its independence in 1991. Its citizens were divided on whether hosting an Olympics was a wise move for a nation that was still developing. The cost of hosting an Olympics has become a recurrent talking point for Mr. Bach. One of his primary initiatives, known as Olympic Agenda 2020, is essentially an overhaul of the bidding process. The goal is to force cities to lower infrastructure costs and thus broaden the pool of potential bid cities but also to meet basic human rights conditions before they will be fully considered.
“The Olympic Games are not for us,” Sagyn Ayimbetova, 40, who has lived in Almaty for 26 years, said afterward. “It would be a hit for our budget, and we would lose so much money. I was afraid our economy would fall down after the Games. So I am happy the committee made a good choice.”
Sanzhar Bokaev, a top executive in Almaty’s city government, said that he believed this was an encouraging result for Almaty and that the city would probably try again.
“We couldn’t win, but to be on a shortlist is a victory for a young country such as Kazakhstan,” Mr. Bokaev said. “We will carry on our work in order to host Olympic Games in the future.”
The cost of hosting an Olympics has become a recurrent talking point for Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee. One of Mr. Bach’s primary initiatives, known as Olympic Agenda 2020, is essentially an overhaul of the bidding process. The goal is to force cities to lower infrastructure costs — and thus broaden the pool of potential bid cities — but also to meet basic human rights conditions before they can be fully considered.
This election was the final one before the rules of the Agenda 2020 program take effect, and many critics of the bidding process noted that it was, in many ways, a fitting coda. Bidding for the Winter Olympics, which are both significantly smaller and less popular than the Summer Games, has always been difficult, but this race was particularly rocky.This election was the final one before the rules of the Agenda 2020 program take effect, and many critics of the bidding process noted that it was, in many ways, a fitting coda. Bidding for the Winter Olympics, which are both significantly smaller and less popular than the Summer Games, has always been difficult, but this race was particularly rocky.
Four European cities, including winter havens such as Oslo and Stockholm, pulled out of the race after initially expressing interest; all cited various political or financial concerns, as well as tepid public support. Those departures left behind only two viable candidates, both of which came with question marks. Four European cities, including winter havens like Oslo and Stockholm, pulled out after initially expressing interest; all cited various political or financial concerns, as well as soft public support. Those departures left behind only two viable candidates, both of which came with question marks.
The global political concerns with China’s government are well known, and Minky Worden, the global initiatives director at Human Rights Watch, said the current situation in China might best be described as “the worst crackdown in the post-1989 period across the board.” Kazakhstan’s human rights record, particularly when it comes to freedom of speech and assembly, as well as tolerance for the L.G.B.T. community, has been criticized by numerous activist groups, while the global political concerns with China’s government are well known. Minky Worden, the global initiatives director at Human Rights Watch, said the current situation in China might best be described as “the worst crackdown in the post-1989 period across the board.”
According to Sophie Richardson, who leads the China desk at Human Rights Watch, “The Olympic motto of ‘higher, faster and stronger’ is a perfect description of the Chinese government’s assault on civil society: more peaceful activists detained in record time, subject to far harsher treatment.” According to Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch, “The Olympic motto of ‘higher, faster, and stronger’ is a perfect description of the Chinese government’s assault on civil society: more peaceful activists detained in record time, subject to far harsher treatment.”
Ms. Richardson added, “In choosing China to host another Games, the I.O.C. has tripped on a major human rights hurdle.” Ms. Richardson added: “In choosing China to host another Games, the I.O.C. has tripped on a major human rights hurdle.”
There was also concern over Beijing’s environmental situation, as air pollution has continued to be a problem and some experts have questioned how the proposed snow-making operation would affect the region ecologically. There is also concern over Beijing’s environmental situation, as air pollution has continued to be a problem and some experts have questioned how the proposed snow-making operation would affect the region ecologically. Organizers played down these concerns, saying the Chinese government was committed to protecting the environment.
Almaty, too, would have presented political and human rights issues. Kazakhstan has been led by the same president, Nursultan A. Nazarbayev, since 1989. Government-imposed limitations on free speech and freedom of assembly through arrests and violence, as well as exhaustive media censorship, are just some of the restrictions faced by Kazakh citizens, according to local activists. After several days of buildup during the I.O.C.’s congress, the delegates finally recorded their votes on paper, after an initial round of electronic balloting failed because of glitches and opted to make history with China, which had never bid for an Olympics before the early 1990s but has now won the rights to two in the past 14 years.
Mr. Bach’s Agenda 2020 plan would, hypothetically, make those sorts of problems more germane to future bidding votes, but it was not clear what sort of role if any human rights concerns had played in the 2022 decision. Mr. Bach’s announcement of the winner prompted much hugging and dancing from the Chinese delegation in the audience.
Ultimately, the voters went with the known commodity. And, artificial snow-making plans notwithstanding, Beijing’s bid slogan of “Joyful Rendezvous Upon Pure Ice and Snow” seemed to resonate eight years after the city spent at least $40 billion to host the Summer Games. “My reaction was kind of slow,” said Mr. Yao, the former basketball star, “because it’s still hard to believe that we actually won.”
In a video message played to voters before the balloting, President Xi Jinping of China was resolute.
“Let me assure you,” he said, “if you choose Beijing, the Chinese people will stage excellent and extraordinary Games.”