Archive

Archive for June, 2009

Olympic Park media centres gets planning go-ahead

June 25th, 2009

Plans were approved for the International Broadcast Centre (IBC) and Main Press Centre (MPC) by the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) Planning Committee last night.

London 2012

Move, learn and discover on Olympic Day 2009

June 23rd, 2009
Olympic Day, 23 June, is a unique, global event held every year. National Olympic Committees (NOC) around the world share this universal festivity with their respective communities, making it the most celebrated Olympic event after the Olympic Games.
 
How it all started
Since 1948, Olympic Day has served to celebrate the anniversary of the International Olympic Committee, created on 23 June 1894, and the revival of the Olympic Games. In 1987, the Olympic Day Run was introduced to build a programme of sporting and educational actions around this anniversary, with the objective of getting as many people as possible across the globe moving and experiencing the Olympic values of excellence, friendship and respect.      
 
More than just a run!
Today, Olympic Day is taking a step forward to be more than just a run. Under the theme “Move, learn, discover!”, the Olympic Day concept now encourages NOCs to organise a wider range of activities inspired by the main theme, in addition to the traditional Olympic Day Run. These could include sporting events encouraging people to move and discover new sports, or Olympic education seminars and educational programmes allowing participants to learn about the Olympic values.
 
Olympic Day Start-Up Kit
In order to support NOCs in the organisation of their Olympic Day, the IOC has produced a 2009 Olympic Day Start-up Kit, which was sent to each NOC in March. This included background history, ideas and tips for activities that could be organised, and guidelines for promoting and communicating their events. The Start-Up Kit also included a CD-ROM with a message from the IOC President, to be uploaded to web sites or played at the Olympic Day events, and Olympic Day diplomas for the participants.
 
High Expectations for 2009 
This year, more than 150 NOCs, with the support of Worldwide Olympic Partner McDonald’s, will be celebrating Olympic Day on or around 23 June, with a wide range of sporting and cultural activities aimed to attract anywhere from 100 to 100,000 participants. The NOC of Costa Rica has planned a two-day event featuring introductions to numerous sports, such as fencing, judo, basketball, archery and table tennis. In addition to the traditional Olympic Day Run, this NOC has also planned bouncy castles and pony rides for the younger participants. The NOC of Brazil is panning a full week of activities led by 11 of its Olympic athletes. In New Zealand, thousands of school children will take part in the Olympic Day Run, and, this year, they are honouring their 1,000 New Zealand Olympians with a series of commemorative celebrations around the country.

IOC

UK lined up for exciting London 2012 Open Weekend

June 23rd, 2009

More than 350 arts, culture and sports events have already signed up to open their doors to the public in new ways for London 2012 Open Weekend, 24-26 July.

London 2012

Round Out Your Vancouver 2010 Experience – Feature Stories – Vancouver 2010

June 22nd, 2009

Flash forward to January of 2010: Where will your interests take you? Cultural Olympiad 2010, presented by Bell, offers excitement for each of those fast-approaching days and nights.

The festival has just announced 35 additional projects for the arts and culture extravaganza, which begins January 22, 2010 and continues throughout the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, until March 21. The new events join the 20 others unveiled earlier this year, with a final batch to be announced in September.

By the time the festival is complete, Cultural Olympiad 2010 will feature more than 600 performances and exhibitions across British Columbia’s Sea to Sky corridor and Metro Vancouver.

To help fill up your cultural calendar, here are four experiences inspired by Cultural Olympiad programming. For schedules, venues and ticket details check the online event listings.

Text a Friend

A grand festival is all about forming partnerships. Consider The National Ballet of Canada and Royal Winnipeg Ballet (RWB), which will take the stage together for the first time in 20 years at the Cultural Olympiad’s Dance Canada Dance gala. RWB artistic director Andre Lewis helms one of North America’s most versatile and accomplished companies and artistic director Karen Kain will bring the full National Ballet to BC for its first visit since 2007: This will be an evening worth sharing, an opportunity to form new bonds watching old friends reconnect.

Meet New People

There is no one quite like Anthony Braxton. He is a virtuosic musician, a sophisticated composer and a mind-bending philosopher all rolled into one irrepressible package. His Sonic Genome Project, a world premiere performance, gives free rein to the audience to wander in and out and around as 60 instrumentalists, among them local students, express the human condition in an all-day musical meet-up.

Partie de danse

Get ready for some French fusion. The Lost Fingers, an acoustic trio out of Quebec City, wrap the gypsy jazz of Django Reinhardt around ‘80s pop hits: Pump Up the Jam and Michael Jackson’s Billie Jean will never be the same. The Juno-nominated band has a new album out, Rendez-vous Rose, and will bring its infectiously fun live show to Cultural Olympiad 2010.

Rediscover a Magical Place

It is difficult to imagine a better setting than the Museum of Anthropology for an exhibition called Boundary and Translation. The refurbished and expanded landmark overlooks the border between land and water on the University of British Columbia campus and has documented and displayed human cultures for decades. Among the dozen creators reinventing this iconic space will be Tania Mouraud, a Parisian artist whose work is often inspired by the exhibition site. In 2010, at the Museum of Anthropology, she and her peers will have plenty to work with.

The full slate of Cultural Olympiad 2010 events, with ticket information, will be available online at vancouver2010.com/culturalolympiad as events are announced.

Vancouver 2010

Canada’s top ballet companies, international cutting-edge theatre troupes, jazz acts and contemporary artists among 35 new projects joining Cultural Olympiad 2010 – News Releases – Vancouver 2010

June 22nd, 2009

Vancouver, BC – The inspiring story of Rick Hansen, whose Man In Motion World Tour is legendary, will take audiences back to the beginning of this remarkable man’s story and make its world premiere as a multi-media stage production — just one of 35 new projects announced today as part of Cultural Olympiad 2010, presented by Bell.

Hailing from Canada and around the world, the new projects, from cutting-edge contemporary works to ancient traditions with a bold new twist, are part of the third and final edition of the Cultural Olympiad festivals. The first 20 projects were announced earlier this spring and many shows have tickets on sale now at www.vancouver2010.com/culturalolympiad.

The extensive program, which starts on January 22, 2010 and runs throughout the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games to March 21, 2010 will include more than 600 ticketed and free performances and exhibitions in 50 venues in Metro Vancouver and British Columbia’s Sea to Sky corridor.

Audiences are in for a treat. The works run the gamut from Canadian greats, such as The National Ballet of Canada and Royal Winnipeg Ballet performing on the same stage for the first time in two decades in a thrilling once-in-a-lifetime Olympic gala, to Ahke Theatre, the darlings of the Russian avant-garde arts scene who will bring their darkly comic White Cabin to Canada for the first time.

“These latest projects demonstrate the full range of what the Cultural Olympiad has to offer,” said David Guscott, executive vice president, celebrations and partnerships for the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC).  “This fall, we’ll announce the remainder of the program, which is presented with the support of the Government of Canada, the home provinces and territories of the performers, as well as arts organizations and festivals large and small.”

Other highlights include a new stage production called Spine from British Columbia’s Realwheels, the deliciously cheesy trio The Lost Fingers from Quebec and a theatrical picture story pitting a modern-day Métis journalist against a famed photographer of Aboriginal peoples in The Edward Curtis Project. The program also includes an exhibit of 12 Canadian and international artists exploring new ways of understanding culture in the 21st century as part of the grand reopening of the University of British Columbia’s Museum of Anthropology.

“For the last three years, our team has scoured stages, concert halls and galleries here at home and internationally for the most exciting established and emerging artists to showcase here in 2010,” explained Burke Taylor, VANOC’s vice-president, culture and celebrations. “The theatre troupes, dance companies, artists and musicians we’re bringing here in seven months stand out because they offer something different, stretching beyond the traditions and boundaries of their discipline to create something entirely new.”

“These projects will inspire audiences and challenge their perceptions of what constitutes classical music, what age means, or even what love is, and we’re excited to share them with you,” he added.

The 35 projects, featuring dancers, musicians, playwrights, new media and visual artists are:

Rick: The Rick Hansen Story
The inspiring story of Rick Hansen, whose Man In Motion World Tour changed the lives of millions, makes its world premiere in a multimedia production from playwright Dennis Foon. Presented with Manitoba Theatre for Young People in partnership with Rotary Okanagan International Children’s Festival and the Rick Hansen Foundation. Commissioned by Arts Partners in Creative Development.

Dance Canada Dance
Take two of Canada’s finest ballet companies and create a once-in-a-lifetime Olympic gala. Presented with The National Ballet of Canada and Royal Winnipeg Ballet.

White Cabin
A surreal and darkly comic work from Russia’s Akhe Theatre, White Cabin is filled with absurd and often touching “events.” The result is a chaotic variety show of fantastic images. Presented with the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. 

Spine
While travelling the online universe, inhabiting various virtual realities and identities, a man discovers the intriguing possibility of reinventing his physical body through cutting-edge technologies and ethically questionable experiments. A Realwheels Society/University of Alberta co-production presented with Simon Fraser University. Co-commissioned by Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad. 

The Lost Fingers
This acoustic trio from Quebec City plays the pop hits of the ’80s in a swinging gypsy jazz style inspired by their musical hero, legendary ‘30s guitarist Django Reinhardt. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society and Winterruption on Granville Island. 

The Edward Curtis Project
A theatrical picture story that creates an unlikely dialogue between a controversial photographer of Aboriginal peoples in North America and a modern-day Métis journalist. Presented with Presentation House Theatre and commissioned by Arts Partners in Creative Development.

Boundary and Translation: New Art Across Cultures
From video installations to traditional community-based art practices, this exhibition of international contemporary art explores new and unexpected ways of understanding culture and its translations in the 21st century. Presented with the UBC Museum of Anthropology. 

Adrian Anantawan with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra
At age 24, violinist Adrian Anantawan has become one of Canada’s most sought-after young violinists. His extraordinary musicianship has been rewarded with invitations to join the finest orchestras all over the world. Presented with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.

An Invitation to an Infiltration
Reflecting on the nature of competitions, An Invitation to an Infiltration makes explicit the rivalry inherent to group exhibitions, showing how it can be a productive state of engagement. Presented with Vancouver’s Contemporary Art Gallery.

Anthony Braxton 12+1 Tet
With his extraordinary 12-piece ensemble, revolutionary American jazz composer Anthony Braxton moves freely between compositions and improvisations, solos and ensemble playing, weaving musical textures full of magic and passionate sparks. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society. 

Anthony Braxton’s Sonic Genome Project
An interactive spectacle by musical visionary Anthony Braxton featuring more than 60 instrumentalists, including international improvisers and local high school students, exploring the sonic universe over eight hours through ensembles that break apart and reform like human cells or societies. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society. 

At Nightfall
Auguste, a shoemaker, discovers a magical water forest in this visually breathtaking dance performance for families by Sursaut Dance Company/Sursaut compagnie de danse. Presented with Surrey Arts Centre and Centennial Theatre. 

BASH’d – A Gay Rap Opera
Irreverent rapping troubadours Feminem and T-Bag tell the tale of star-crossed lovers Jack and Dillon in this “Romeo meets Romeo” tale of revenge gone wrong, by Edmonton-based playwrights and performers Chris Craddock and Nathan Cuckow. Presented with The Cultch. 

Best Before
Using 200 wireless joysticks connected to one giant screen, the audience will create its own unique virtual city with Germany’s Rimini Protokoll. No two cities/performances will be alike. Presented with The Cultch and PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. Commissioned by Arts Partners in Creative Development. 

Body & Soul
Fourteen extraordinary women from all across Canada, who auditioned by writing a letter to their bodies, share stories about life after 45 in this thought-provoking play by award-winning Canadian playwright Judith Thompson.

China
Part social documentary, part personal observation, photographer-storyteller William Yang’s China is an unforgettable journey of reflection on the meaning of culture and belonging. Presented with the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival and Theatre at UBC. 

CrystalMagnets
Longtime friends and musical explorers Andy Milne (Canada) and Benoît Delbecq (France) reunite to perform Crystal Magnets, their sublime new jazz project for two acoustic pianos. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society and Winterruption on Granville Island. 

Dance Marathon
Amateurs, bring your dancing shoes and enter this endurance contest/staged performance event where you’ll go head-to-head with the dancing pros of bluemouth inc. and celebrities to see who can outwit, outlast and out-dance the competition. Presented with Boca del Lupo, a Harbourfront Centre commission. 

DBR with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra
Reminiscent of Lenny Kravitz, Daniel Bernard Roumain, or DBR, does for amplified violin what Jimi Hendrix did for the electric guitar with his rock and hip hop arrangements of classical music. Presented with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.

The Drowning Girls
Opening with a splash, three breathless brides emerge gasping from watery graves — their bathtubs — to relive the tale of serial Edwardian bigamist and murderer George Joseph Smith and how he literally “took their breath away.” Presented with Gateway Theatre/A Bent Out of Shape production. 

The Erotic Anguish of Don Juan
The ghost of the infamous Spanish seducer Don Juan comes back from hell to harangue the audience in the name of cosmic love. Is he a sinner or a saint? With puppets! Presented with Alberta’s Old Trout Puppet Workshop and the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts. 

FlorenceK
Quebec-born jazz-pop chanteuse and pianist Florence K dazzles the audience with her vocal and songwriting abilities in many languages, including French, English, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society and Winterruption on Granville Island. 

High Performance: Evolution and Innovation in Canadian Design
Featuring the work of Canadian designers from across the country, this exhibition focuses on products for work and play inspired by our environment and lifestyle. Presented with Charles H. Scott Gallery.

KAMP
In KAMP, Dutch theatre company Hotel Modern blends theatre, puppetry and film in an attempt to imagine the unimaginable: the greatest mass murder in history, committed in the purpose-built camp of Auschwitz. Presented with PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. 

Monster
Nightmare landscapes on acrylic, child-like drawings of ghost figures and beautiful carvings of mythological spirits are part of Monster, an exhibition exploring monstrous sensibilities in contemporary culture. Be afraid. Presented with West Vancouver Museum. 

The Passion of Joan of Arc
Vancouver’s innovative Eye of Newt Ensemble perform a newly commissioned score to accompany Carl Dreyer’s 1928 silent film masterpiece The Passion of Joan of Arc, France’s most famous martyr. Presented with PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. 

Poetics: a ballet brut
This is do-it-yourself theatre at its most mischievous by the Nature Theater of Oklahoma. Common gestures and movements are taken to hilarious new heights unhampered by the performers’ complete lack of formal dance training. Presented with PuSh International Performing Arts Festival.

Quilt of Belonging
Appliquéd butterfly wings, beaded silk, African mud cloth and Salish weaving are a few of the materials and techniques used to make this 36-metre tapestry a masterpiece of textile artistry. Presented with Surrey Art Gallery. 

Son of Chamber Symphony
One night, three intimate chamber symphonies, including Canadian and world premiere performances, played by Vancouver’s Turning Point Ensemble. The pieces include challenging harmonic works by composers Arnold Schoenberg of Austria, American John Adams and Vancouver-born John Oliver. Mr. Oliver’s composition commissioned by Arts Partners in Creative Development. 

Sound of the Ocean
U Theatre, Taiwan’s Tao masters of martial arts and percussion, enchant audiences worldwide with a mesmerizing feast of music and movement that traces a drop of water on its journey from the sky to the vast ocean. Presented with the Asian-Canadian Special Events Association. 

Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys
The rollicking enduring spirit of L’Acadie fused with the swampy southern heat of Louisiana fuel the sweet folk ballads and dancehall beats of nouveau Cajun musicians Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society and Winterruption on Granville Island. 

TAO
TAO’s performance isn’t just another Japanese taiko show. It’s an explosive experience with overwhelming power that stimulates the senses through its pounding drum beats. It’s energetic, muscular, artistic, alluring and spectacular! Presented with Global Arts Concerts. 

Tono
Thundering hooves and shamanic visions are conjured by dynamic percussion and the haunting lilt of the morin khuur as leaping dancers take centre stage in Tono. An original production by Red Sky Performance. 

Underneath the Lintel
An uptight Dutch librarian takes off on a globe-trotting pursuit of the anonymous person who audaciously drops an overdue library book into his return slot — 113 years late! Presented with Chutzpah! The Lisa Nemetz International Showcase of Jewish Performing Arts and The Cultch. 

La valse d’Angèle/Because She Hoped: French Canadian Folk Tales
Traditional French-Canadian folk songs, dancing and storytelling fondly revisited and magnificently transformed for the 21st century by a hand-picked ensemble of Canada’s leading creative musicians under the direction of François Houle. Presented with the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society and Winterruption on Granville Island. 

The full slate of Cultural Olympiad 2010 events, along with ticket information, will be available online at www.vancouver2010.com/culturalolympiad as soon as events are announced. 

Background

About the Cultural Olympiad
The Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad, presented by Bell, is a series of multidisciplinary festivals and digital programs showcasing the best in Canadian and international arts and popular culture. Launched in 2008, the program culminates in the 60-day Cultural Olympiad 2010 (January 22 to March 21, 2010), which begins before and continues throughout the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. 

Partnerships

Bell
Bell is proud to be a Premier National Partner and the exclusive Telecommunications Partner to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, and the presenting sponsor for the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad. Bell is Canada’s largest communications company, providing consumers and business with solutions to all their communications needs, including Bell Home phone local and long distance services, Bell Mobility and Solo Mobile wireless, high-speed Bell Internet, Bell TV direct-to-home satellite and VDSL television, IP-broadband services and information and communications technology (ICT) services. Bell is wholly owned by BCE Inc. (TSX, NYSE: BCE). For information on Bell’s products and services, please visit www.bell.ca. For corporate information on BCE, please visit www.bce.ca

Government
The Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad is grateful for the support of the Government of Canada and the governments of all of Canada’s provinces and territories and their respective cultural agencies: British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Yukon. In addition to the Cultural Olympiad’s government and corporate partners, CODE is proudly supported by the Canada Council for the Arts and the National Film Board of Canada. New Media BC and Wavefront Innovation Society are also both active participants in the project. The National Presentation and Touring Program is generously supported by the Canada Council for the Arts. 

Arts Partners in Creative Development
Arts Partners in Creative Development (APCD) is a strategic investment partnership to assist BC arts and cultural organizations create and develop new works or further develop existing works, with the intent of producing, presenting or exhibiting them at the highest standard. Organizations can apply for funding to create, commission and develop original work in the performing, visual, media or literary arts. With an initial investment of .5 million over three years, APCD facilitates the creation and development of new work to showcase both locally and worldwide. APCD funding partners include VANOC, the Province of British Columbia, 2010 Legacies Now, the City of Vancouver, the Canada Council for the Arts and the Vancouver Foundation.

About VANOC
VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010. Visit www.vancouver2010.com.

Contact
If you are a member of the media, please contact mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

For all other inquiries, please contact info@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010

Agreement signed for Olympic Village affordable homes

June 22nd, 2009

The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has signed the final agreement for Triathlon Homes to purchase 1,379 affordable homes on the Olympic Village development.

London 2012

Works of art by more than 90 Aboriginal artists at 2010 Winter Games venues to inspire athletes and spectators, and celebrate Canada’s rich cultural diversity – News Releases – Vancouver 2010

June 18th, 2009

Vancouver, BC– An airy stream of metal salmon shimmering overhead, five intricately carved spindle whorls inspired by curling rocks and three long-limbed wolves howling in unison on the Prairies are among the beautiful works of art by more than 90 Aboriginal artists that will grace the 2010 Winter Games venues as part of the Vancouver 2010 Venues’ Aboriginal Art Program.

The names of the respected and emerging Aboriginal artists taking part in the program were announced today by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) in partnership with the Four Host First Nations.

First Nations, Inuit and Métis artists participating in the program are from every province and territory in Canada and include Brendalynn Trennert of Hay River, NWT; Alan Syliboy of Millbrook, NS; Stephen Peltonen of Hearst, ON; Brent Sparrow and Kevin McKenzie of Vancouver, BC; and Jason Baerg of Toronto, ON. A complete list of participants is available at www.vancouver2010.com.

“These works of art by some of Canada’s most established and up-and-comingAboriginal artists will be front and centre in our 15 Olympic and Paralympic venues and will remain there as a permanent legacy of the Games beyond 2010,” said Dan Doyle, VANOC’s executive vice president responsible for Aboriginal participation. “In some cases, these beautiful artworks are seamlessly integrated into the structure of the venue itself.”

The variety of artwork is staggering. Textiles, copper, steel, concrete, yellow cedar, glass and caribou tufting are among the mediums used and the subject matter features Aboriginal symbols, such as the raven, bear, salmon, sun and canoe in traditional and contemporary styles.

In addition to leaving a physical legacy of artwork, the program is helping create an educational and cultural legacy by pairing established artists with several at-risk young people in urban and rural areas from across Canada to create three original sculptures for showcasing in 2010.

“Mentors, such as Haida artist Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, are opening up a new world of opportunity for inner-city Aboriginal youth,” said Tewanee Joseph, chief executive officer of the Four Host First Nations. “This type of programming allows us to celebrate the strength and innovation of our youth.”

More than 140 individual pieces of original artwork will be produced as part of the more than -million Venues’ Aboriginal Art Program, with over 40 becoming part of the Games permanent legacy at the venues. Sixteen Four Host First Nations works will have pride of place in areas such as entrances and gateways at venues like Pacific Coliseum and the Olympic and Paralympic Villages in Whistler and Vancouver. This means the first thing visitors will see as they enter is a welcoming work by a hosting Aboriginal artist. This program is part of VANOC’s venue construction budget.

“This program offers an unprecedented opportunity to create a once-in-a-lifetime contemporary collection of art from First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples for all the world to marvel at and enjoy during Canada’s Games in 2010,” said Chuck Strahl, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians. “Through these more than 90 sculptors, tufters, weavers and painters, we’re celebrating the rich cultural diversity of our country and honouring Aboriginal peoples across Canada.”

“Canada is experiencing a renaissance in Aboriginal art from First Nations, Inuit and Métis and the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games will showcase this incredible talent to the world,” said BC Premier Gordon Campbell. “Their works will inspire everyone — from the world’s best athletes to visitors alike — as they act as a permanent cultural and artistic legacy of the Games.”

The Aboriginal works of art displayed in the venues will also be featured in O Siyam:Celebrating Aboriginal Art through the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, published by John Wiley & Sons Canada Ltd. The full-colour coffee-table book will be available in stores this fall.

For images of selected artworks from Aboriginal artists participating in the Vancouver 2010 Venues’ Aboriginal Art Program, visit www.vancouver2010.com.

About VANOC
VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010. Please visit www.vancouver2010.com for more information.

About the Four Host First Nations Society
The Four Host First Nations Society is a not-for-profit organization that has been established to coordinate the participation in the 2010 Winter Games by the Lil’wat, Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. To learn more about the Four Host First Nations Society, visit www.fourhostfirstnations.com.

Contact
If you are a member of the media, please contact mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

For all other inquiries, please contact info@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010

More than ten million people to take part in ‘Inspire’ programme

June 18th, 2009

The London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) today announced the success of the first phase of the London 2012 Inspire programme.

London 2012

2016 candidate cities brief IOC members

June 17th, 2009
The four candidate cities bidding to host the Games of the XXXI Olympiad in 2016 – Chicago (USA), Tokyo (Japan), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and Madrid (Spain) [1] – were all at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne (Switzerland) today to give a technical briefing to the 93 members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), who were present for the event. Today’s presentations, which resulted in dozens of detailed questions, will be followed tomorrow by an opportunity for members to ask more follow-up questions to each city about their projects, as well as giving the media an opportunity to meet with each of the Candidate Cities.

IOC President Jacques Rogge said, “Since my election in 2001, we have been making a concerted effort at the IOC to improve our transfer of knowledge capacities and to ensure that the evaluation process continues to be clear and offers criteria from which the cities can be evaluated. The fact that we have four cities with very strong projects bidding for the 2016 Games is testament to that work and to the success of recent editions of the Games. As part of the natural evolution of our effort, today’s briefings are allowing us to continue to bring more transparency, fairness and professionalism to the evaluation process, which has been underlined by the active participation of my fellow members.”

 

The briefings come closely on the heels of the four-day visits of the IOC’s Evaluation Commission, led by IOC Member Nawal El Moutawakel, to each of the Candidate Cities. The Commission is now in the process of producing its evaluation report, which will be distributed to the IOC members no later than one month before election day. The final vote will be held in Copenhagen (Denmark) on 2 October 2009.

 

Evaluation Commission Chairwoman Nawal El Moutawakel noted, “The Evaluation Commission and I have just spent April and May visiting each of the four Candidate Cities, getting a good understanding for each of the projects and looking at the reality on the ground. These briefings will complement perfectly the Commission’s report and will ensure that all IOC members with a vote in October have access to the information that they need to evaluate the cities in the best way possible.”

 

This is the first time that the Candidate Cities have had the opportunity to brief the members in such a way and this evolution comes from the IOC’s evaluation process of previous bid procedures, where it was felt that another opportunity to present the technical elements of a bid to the IOC members would be appreciated by all involved. Approved by the Executive Board at its meeting in Beijing (P.R. China) in April 2008, this addition to the evaluation of the Candidate Cities shows the IOC’s willingness to learn and improve on the bidding process and also to ensure that members are able to make their decision based on the most complete information possible.

 

IOC Olympic Games Executive Director Gilbert Felli commented, “Under the leadership of President Rogge, the IOC has developed a strong focus on the transfer of knowledge between Games, in order to ensure that the Games remain as the number one sporting event in the world. The bid process is also a part of that, and there was a strong feeling, following the 2014 bid, that a technical meeting like today’s would be useful for all concerned. We have taken that feedback on board and all the Candidate Cities now have an additional opportunity to make their case in detail, on an equal platform and in a less formal way than at the Session at which the host city is elected.”

 

[1] Cities are listed in the order of drawing of lots.

 

###
NOTES TO EDITORS:
 
The presentations are scheduled to conclude at 17:30 CET, so some media assets may not be available until after this time.
 
Further information on the 2016 Bidding Process can be found here:

 

2016 Bid Process:

 

 

Evaluation Commission Visits:

 

PHOTOS:
To view and download photos on flickr.com, please click here 
 

VIDEOS:
To download broadcast-quality videos from the AFPTV Video Forum, please click here
Login: IOC – Password:MEDIA2009

Watch an interview of the IOC President Jacques Rogge on the candidature procedure for 2016

 

###

 

For further information, please contact the IOC Communications Department, Tel: +41 21 621 60 00, email: pressoffice@olympic.org

     

IOC

The IOC takes action against the NOC of Kuwait

June 17th, 2009
The Executive Board of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided today to suspend the National Olympic Committee (NOC) of Kuwait, effective 1 August 2009, in order to protect the Olympic Movement in Kuwait from interference by the Kuwaiti public authorities.
 
This deferred suspension allows time for the public authorities responsible for sport in Kuwait to amend a national sports law currently in force that is not compatible with the principles and rules of the Olympic Movement. The law prevents the NOC and the Kuwaiti Olympic Movement as a whole from complying with the principle of autonomy of sports organisations as set out in the Olympic Charter.
 
The IOC, together with the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) and the Kuwait Olympic Committee, has tried for nearly two years to find an appropriate and concerted solution with the local and government authorities in Kuwait. However, the IOC was informed that the government authorities were not in a position to respect their commitments within the set deadline.

Consequently, on the basis of the provision of the Olympic Charter (Rule 28.9 in particular), and in order to protect the Olympic Movement in Kuwait, the IOC Executive Board ruled as follows:
 
The Kuwait Olympic Committee will be suspended on 1 August 2009 if, by 31 July 2009 at midnight (CET), the process of amending the local law is not duly finalised, as per the agreements signed and the written commitment from the Kuwaiti authorities.

“It is critical that this situation is resolved as soon as possible for the sake of sport, and in particular the Kuwaiti athletes,” said Pere Miró, Director of the IOC’s Department of NOC Relations “I am hopeful that satisfactory measures will be put into place before the 31 July deadline in order to avoid the implementation of such a sanction.”

 

###
NOTES TO EDITORS: 
 
Rule 28.9 of the Olympic Charter states that “the IOC Executive Board may take any appropriate decisions for the protection of the Olympic Movement in the country of an NOC, including suspension of or withdrawal of recognition from such NOC if the constitution, law or other regulations in force in the country concerned, or any act by any governmental or other body, causes the activity of the NOC or the making or expression of its will to be hampered.”

 

The mission of the IOC is to promote Olympism throughout the world and to lead the Olympic Movement. The Olympic Charter states that NOCs must preserve their autonomy and resist pressure of any kind — including, but not limited to, political, legal, religious or economic pressures — which may prevent them from complying with the Olympic Charter.

###
PHOTOS:
To view and download photos on flickr.com, please click here 

 

VIDEOS:
To download broadcast quality videos from the AFPTV Video Forum, please click here
Login: IOC – Password: MEDIA2009

 

For further information, please contact the IOC Communications Department, Tel: +41 21 621 60 00, email: pressoffice@olympic.org

IOC