Taiwan to host rival World Games in 2009
KAOHSIUNG (Reuters) - Move over, Beijing Olympics.
An international sporting event that covers korfball, billiards, dragon boat racing and women's tug-of-war will open in just one year in Taiwan, a rival to mainland China since their split in 1949.
Kaohsiung, a gritty Taiwan industrial city of 1.6 million, is months away from finishing 23 venues, including a giant bowling alley and a bay for life-saving competitions, as host of the 2009 World Games, officials said on Friday.
The World Games will showcase 31 sports that do not make it for the Olympics, but could qualify eventually.
The International Olympics Committee-sanctioned World Games will bring 4,500 athletes from 90 countries to Kaohsiung next summer, giving Taiwan a rare blast of international limelight less than a year after the 2008 Beijing Olympics from August 8-24.
"The sports get exposure, and so do the country and the city," Ron Froehlich, president of the International World Games Federation told Reuters. More than 500,000 spectators have attended past events, he said.
"Everything is rolling and on schedule," he said.
Because of Taiwan's political isolation from fast-growing economic powerhouse China, the self-ruled island seldom qualifies for international events that originate overseas. It has never held an international sporting event of this scale.
China has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since 1949, when Mao Zedong's Communists won the Chinese civil war and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists (KMT) fled to the island. Beijing has vowed to bring Taiwan under its rule, by force if necessary.
Kaohsiung won the games bid in 2004 when two would-be competitors were disqualified for lack of basic infrastructure.
"The Games raise our city's name recognition, which will boost tourism, stimulating people from other places to visit," said Emily Hsu, local chief executive for the games.
Since the World Games began in 1981, the event has taken place in eight other cities, from Finland to Japan.
The July 16-26 Kaohsiung games feature limited-audience sports such as roller-skating, dragon boat races and canoe polo.
Games preparations that began two years ago are expected to cost $79 million, Hsu said. Major venues include a domed stadium with 15,000 seats and another for 55,000 spectators.
A street in Kaohsiung has been named after the World Games, and buildings and public buses are set for facelifts. A subway system opened earlier this year serves the major venues. Continued...




