KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA
The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.
04/12/2014
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) today announced that CCTV has been
awarded the exclusive broadcast rights in China for the XXIII Olympic Winter
Games in PyeongChang in 2018, and the Games of the XXXII Olympiad in Tokyo in
2020, as well as the Olympic Games in 2022 and 2024, the host cities of which
have yet to be elected.
IOC President Thomas Bach said: “On behalf of the IOC I am
delighted that we will continue to work with our longstanding broadcast partner
CCTV. They have demonstrated many times their ability to bring first class
coverage of the Olympic Games to hundreds of millions of Chinese people. The
revenue the IOC has secured from this agreement will be redistributed to support
future organisers of the Olympic Games, as well as supporting sport and athletes
in China and around the world.”
Mr.Hu Zhanfan ,President of CCTV said: “This is a win-win agreement. CCTV has been contributing enormously for the recognition and promotion of the Olympic Games and the Olympic Movement in China and we are determined to be, as always, a powerful and exceptional partner of the IOC.”
IOC Vice-President Mr Zaiqing Yu, a member of the IOC’s TV Rights and New Media Commission, said: “CCTV is a strong supporter of the Olympic values and we look forward to continuing our partnership through to 2024.”
CCTV, China’s state broadcaster, has acquired the rights across all broadcast platforms, including free-to-air television, subscription television, internet and mobile phone in all languages. The agreement also includes the right to broadcast all editions of the Youth Olympic Games until 2024.
The IOC has an existing agreement with CCTV to broadcast the Rio 2016 Olympic Games: http://www.olympic.org/news/ioc-awards-2014-and-2016-olympic-games-broadcast-rights-in-china/169781
Mr.Hu Zhanfan ,President of CCTV said: “This is a win-win agreement. CCTV has been contributing enormously for the recognition and promotion of the Olympic Games and the Olympic Movement in China and we are determined to be, as always, a powerful and exceptional partner of the IOC.”
IOC Vice-President Mr Zaiqing Yu, a member of the IOC’s TV Rights and New Media Commission, said: “CCTV is a strong supporter of the Olympic values and we look forward to continuing our partnership through to 2024.”
CCTV, China’s state broadcaster, has acquired the rights across all broadcast platforms, including free-to-air television, subscription television, internet and mobile phone in all languages. The agreement also includes the right to broadcast all editions of the Youth Olympic Games until 2024.
The IOC has an existing agreement with CCTV to broadcast the Rio 2016 Olympic Games: http://www.olympic.org/news/ioc-awards-2014-and-2016-olympic-games-broadcast-rights-in-china/169781
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