Exactly one month out from the start of the 2008 Olympic Games, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) gave its assessment from the Chinese capital on how the organizers are faring.
At the close of a two-day meeting between the IOC and the Beijing Olympic Games Organizing Committee (BOCOG), Hein Verbruggen, Chairman of the IOC's Coordination Commission for Beijing 2008, heading up this week's visiting 12-person IOC delegation said, ÔÇ£Here in the Chinese capital you can now really sense the excitement and anticipation. The city feels ready; it looks ready, with the stunning venues all completed. The quality of preparation, the readiness of the venues and the attention to operational detail for these Games have set a gold standard for the future. What our hosts have achieved is exceptional. For the Games to be an overriding success - and the IOC has an underlying confidence this will unquestionably be the case - the organizers need now to deliver the services pledged for, and therefore expected by, the various stakeholders who have begun to arrive for the Games. A very small number of open issues remain - such as some matters with broadcasters and our need to see how temporary measures in the city will make an impact on air quality. But across the board, for the number of areas we went through this week with BOCOG, we are satisfied. When athletes, sports officials, spectators and media arrive in this city over the coming weeks, I have no doubt they will be impressed when they see things with their own eyes; and they will be touched by the warmth of the welcome the Chinese people will show them.ÔÇØ
Verbruggen joined the
Some 20 areas of operations were covered between the IOC and BOCOG on Monday and Tuesday including: sport, venues, Olympic Green, media, ceremonies, technology and ticketing. Organizers gave an update on the clean-up operation taking place in
Source: IOC