Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Olympic Solidarity - Chasing The Dream

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

10/03/2015
Thanks to the IOC's Olympic Solidarity programme, athletes from all over the world are receiving the support they need to compete at the Olympic Games.
With less than two years to go until the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, athletes’ preparations are in full flow as they focus on preparing for the biggest sporting event on the planet. For many, their hopes of competing at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad – and potentially winning a medal – receive a huge boost from the support of Olympic Solidarity.
Ever since 1962, when the Committee for International Olympic Aid was formed to assist newly independent countries, the IOC has been working hand-in-hand with the National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to provide support to athletes around the world. In 1981, the Olympic Solidarity Commission was established, with a new strategy to assist the NOCs, and has been providing invaluable support over the past three decades. Through a variety of targeted programmes designed to meet the NOCs’ needs, Olympic Solidarity aims to help them develop and expand sports  in their respective countries and territories.
Today, Olympic Solidarity manages a quadrennial plan, distributing funds generated from the NOCs’ share of the revenue from the broadcast rights from the Olympic Games. For the 2013-2016 plan, Olympic Solidarity is responsible for a global budget of USD 438 million, an increase of USD 127 million from the 2009-2012 budget. Seventy per cent of these funds are divided between two main programmes – World Programmes and Continental Programmes – while  the remaining portion of the budget is allocated to Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) programmes, Olympic Games subsidies and complementary programmes.
There are 17 World Programmes in all, separated into four sections to support athletes, coaches, NOC management and the promotion of Olympic values. The Continental Programmes managed by the five Continental Associations – for which the budget has increased by 30 per cent for the current quadrennial period – target the specific requirements of NOCs on each continent.
 
"I was able to just focus on my goal of becoming an olympic athlete", Kirsty Coventry, seven-time olympic medallist.
For those athletes and NOCs setting their sights on Rio 2016, the Olympic Scholarship programme provides significant assistance, with a total allocated budget of USD 22 million. Focusing in particular on those with the greatest need, the programme offers technical and financial support to a fixed number of elite athletes in their training and qualification preparations.
Zimbabwean swimmer and seven-time Olympic medallist Kirsty Coventry is one  of many athletes who have benefited from a scholarship. “Coming from a small NOC that doesn’t have a lot of finance, our sports weren’t funded very well,” explains Coventry, who is a member of the IOC Athletes’ Commission. “As a swimmer and as an athlete, you have to travel to different competitions in order to refine your competition technique and how you handle different situations – it’s such a vital part. So the scholarship came in and helped with that and it was amazing. I could suddenly go to three or four  different meets.”
The scholarships help athletes in many ways, from coaching and covering the travel costs for competitions, to medical and scientific support. These areas of support are aimed at helping the athletes achieve the programme’s primary objective: to qualify for the Olympic Games. “All those little things help take the pressure off an athlete and I was able to just focus on my goal of becoming an Olympic champion,” Coventry says.
Judging by the results of the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, Olympic Solidarity is achieving its goals. The Olympic Scholarship programme was introduced for the first time for a Winter Games at Vancouver in 2010. Four years later, a total budget of USD 10 million was allocated for Sochi. Individual scholarships were awarded to 66 NOCs, seven NOCs received tailor- made grants with individual scholarships, while another four NOCs were also given tailor-made grants. Of the 440 athletes who benefited from the programme, 273 – or 62 per cent – qualified for Sochi. Many went on to flourish on the biggest stage: between them, the scholarship holders won 17 medals, including seven golds, while 51 athletes received diplomas for recording 4th-8th place finishes.
Two of those gold medallists were twin sisters Vita and Valja Semerenko, who were part of Ukraine’s victorious women’s biathlon 4x6km relay team. “It is hard to underestimate the contribution of the Olympic Solidarity programme,” says Valja. “The figures prove it. For most participants it gives a chance to be prepared in high quality conditions and show the highest possible performance in such a tough competition as the Olympic Games.”
“The Olympic Solidarity programmes are very flexible and favourable for their participants,” adds Vita. “There is no doubt that the Olympic Solidarity scholarship played a significant role [in our success] – both in financial and psychological terms.”
Austria’s Daniela Iraschko-Stolz helped make history in Sochi, when she competed in the first ever women’s ski jumping event to take place at the Winter Games. She won a silver medal and credits the Solidarity programme with playing a vital part in her success.
“It helped to improve my training quality in a period when it could have been crucial,” she said. “It helped to pay for hotels and trips during summer time and we were able to host more training camps. We also added another coach to our team who specifically took care of our jumping equipment like
skis and suits.”
There was a similar success story at the 2nd Youth Olympic Games (YOG) in Nanjing. Offering both technical and financial assistance, the Solidarity programme for the YOG helped 116 NOCs identify young athletes, and assisted 108 NOCs with the organisation of qualification events.

Olympic Solidarity has helped Valja Semerenko become Olympic champion.
Olympic Solidarity also awarded 361 preparation grants to promising qualified young athletes, including swimmer Marcelo Acosta from El Salvador. In the build-up to Nanjing, he used the grant to take part in a training programme in Florida and went on to win a silver medal in the men’s 400m freestyle event.
Two other silver medallists who made the most of their opportunities were Dulguun Bolormaa from Mongolia and Kyrgyzstan judoka Rotislav Dashkov. Despite only taking up wrestling in 2010, Bolormaa has emerged as one of the sport’s brightest young stars and won silver in the women’s freestyle -46kg event. Dashkov, meanwhile, was invited to take part in the International Judo Federation’s youth training camp in Switzerland, thanks to the Olympic Solidarity identification programme. Following this experience he went on to win silver in Nanjing.
Whether competing at youth level, in Summer or Winter Games, all these athletes benefited from the Olympic Solidarity support. And if the performances of this Nanjing trio, the Semerenko twins and Iraschko-Stolz are anything to go by, there should be plenty more positive results in Rio in 2016.

Let’s hear it for the ladies on International Women’s Day!

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

Let’s hear it for the ladies on International Women’s Day!
©IOC/Arnaud Meylan, Jason Evans
08/03/2015
Today is International Women’s Day, and we are celebrating the inspirational female athletes who demonstrate that sport, of all kinds and at all levels, is for girls and women, too!
At The Olympic Museum for a special weekend of events centred on International Women’s Day, Olympian and five-time World Boxing Champion Mary Kom took the time to answer some of our questions. As a bronze medalist at the Olympic Games London 2012 and the third Indian woman to win an individual medal at the Games, Kom has made a name for herself both inside and outside the ring as a fantastic athlete and an inspiration to countless girls and women in her country.

How and when did you get involved in boxing?Since childhood, I have always had an interest in sports, where I did well at school, and was also particularly interested in in martial arts. Seeing my performances, my teacher suggested I get into sports. I began with athletics but was then introduced to women’s boxing. Inspired by the success of Dingko Singh at the 1998 Asian Games, I decided to take up the sport in 2000.

What are people’s reactions when you say you are a boxer?It was a different story when I first started boxing. People were kind of shocked to learn I was boxing, as, those days, it was considered only a man’s game. I still remember how my own community would look at me. I was considered such an odd person. Even my own father was against this decision of mine. It took me days to convince him. But it is different now...

What advice would you give to girls or women interested in starting boxing?Girls, if you know you are gifted in boxing or if you really like it, just grab it with both hands and go for it. Boxing is not just a game, but has now become a good career that you could have. Besides contributing to being fit and healthy, it can earn you wealth, happiness, and recognition, and create new opportunities. But it does involve hard work, determination and faith. It is challenging as the competition is really tough these days, but not different for any other field.

Women’s boxing made its debut at the Olympic Games London 2012. What are your hopes for the future of women’s boxing, as well as your personal objectives?Women’s boxing is growing at a good pace. It has attracted many people and is being looked up to and appreciated. I would say it has got a very good future. It’s just the beginning, and it’s already shown some outstanding results.
As for myself, I am mentally prepared for Rio 2016. After a bronze at London, I am determined to change the colour of my medal. I will be at my best, and the rest is in the hands of God.

When you retire from the ring, would you like to continue working in the field of sport?Yes. I love boxing because it has given me almost everything. It changed me and my life. I know I’m going to miss it once I retire, so I want to commit myself fully to training and producing the next generation of champions and inspirational role models. This mission is already underway. I have my own boxing academy in Imphal, which I started in 2006. Once I retire, I am going to devote myself full time to training my students, sharing with them my skills and experiences in boxing.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

IOC statement on the creation of a special place for mourning in the Olympic Village

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.




IOC statement on the creation of a special place for mourning in the Olympic Village
06/03/2015
In its commitment to strengthening support for athletes, the International Olympic Committee has agreed to create a mourning place within the Olympic Village during the period of the Olympic Games in Rio in 2016. The chosen spot will allow athletes and all those in the Village to mourn those who have passed away, in a special and dignified way.
The Executive Board intends to inaugurate this mourning place with a special ceremony that will give the opportunity to remember, in particular, those people who have died at the Olympic Games.
It has also been decided to devote a moment during the Closing Ceremony of the Olympic Games to allow everybody in the stadium, as well as those watching at home, to remember loved ones who have passed away.
“We want to give the athletes and others in the Olympic Village the opportunity to express their mourning in a dignified way and in an environment where representatives of the whole world are living together peacefully under the same roof”, said IOC President Thomas Bach.
“The moment of reflection in the Closing Ceremony should act as a reminder that this is an important and solemn Olympic moment, but that life is about more”, he added.

International Women’s Day: Sport empowering women and girls

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.




International Women’s Day: Sport empowering women and girls
©IOC/Jason Evans/Getty Images
06/03/2015
With International Women’s Day (8 March) just around the corner, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) salutes all those that contribute to the development of girls’ and women’s sport. On this occasion, The Olympic Museum is hosting its very own special weekend celebrations honouring female athletes who are making a name for themselves in what are traditionally considered to be male-dominated sports. 
Despite the progress made in the long road to full equality in sport, there are still many barriers and prejudices to overcome. Reacting to clichés of certain sports being “a man’s game”, or “not for girls”, The Olympic Museum is shining a spotlight on women who are challenging directly such preconceptions by practising such sports.


Inspiring female athletesOn 7 and 8 March, The Olympic Museum is bringing together a boxer, a wrestler, a mountaineer and an extreme sports athlete to share their experiences, passions and reasons for pursuing their respective disciplines. The two-day event will feature sports demonstrations, round-table discussions and film projections of, and with, inspirational female athletes. 

Click here for more information on this weekend’s programme at The Olympic Museum.
On International Women’s Day, United World Wrestling (UWW) will also conclude its eight-week “Super 8” campaign. Over the course of the last two months, this programme has brought together eight female wrestlers, including Olympic champions Saori Yoshida (JPN), Natalia Vorobieva (RUS) and Carol Hunyh (CAN), for a series of activities and sports demonstrations, in a bid to raise awareness of women’s wrestling and increase female participation at all levels of the sport.

Watch here an interview with Canada’s first Olympic women’s wrestling champion, Carol Hunyh:


In support of UWW’s Super 8 campaign, The Olympic Museum is looking back at how wrestling, a sport which dates back to the Ancient Games, has opened up to women. Featuring portraits of eight ambassadors, archive images and interactive displays, the exhibition will run until 28 June 2015.

For more details on this exhibition, click here.

Looking ahead to empower women and girlsFostering gender equality and strengthening women’s participation in, and through, sport is one of the IOC’s key missions. This was emphasised in the adoption last December of Olympic Agenda 2020, the IOC’s strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement. The IOC continues to work with International Federations (IFs) and National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to achieve the goal of women representing 50 per cent of the athletes taking part in the Olympic Games, as well as promoting the participation and presence of women in sport generally.

The IOC is eager to look ahead; eager to demonstrate the value of sport in various arenas of civil society. Next week, it will join UN Women at the 59th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, in New York, to co-host a side event that will explore how girls and women can be empowered through sport. This will be a unique opportunity to bring together Member States, UN agencies, NGOs, civil society and representatives from the world of sport to position sport as an important tool to promote and achieve gender equality.

Under the theme of empowering girls and to mark International Women’s Day, Worldwide TOP Partner Procter & Gamble has also released a new video featuring American Olympic ice hockey player Hilary Knight, which celebrates inspirational young women around the world redefining what doing sports ‘like a girl’ means.

Watch the video here:


“Can Sport Save the World?” – IOC President addresses NOC Congress in Denmark

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.





“Can Sport Save the World?” – IOC President addresses NOC Congress in Denmark
05/03/2015
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach was the guest of the Danish National Olympic Committee today at its Congress in Copenhagen.
He told the audience: “Sport can neither save the world alone nor can it alone make the world a better and peaceful place. But sport has the power to contribute to a better harmonious and peaceful world.”
He also made it clear that: “choosing a host city does not mean that the IOC necessarily agrees with the political or the legal system in the host country.  It means however that in every country where we organise Olympic Games we want to send the strong message of tolerance, respect and fair play as well as the compliance with all the values of the Olympic Charter for all participants at the Olympic Games.”
The IOC President was joined by His Royal Highness Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, an IOC member, President of the Danish National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation Niels Nygaard, and the Danish Minister of Cultural Affairs, Marianne Jelved.
President Bach also spoke about Olympic Agenda 2020, the strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement.
He told the audience that, just eight weeks after the reforms were unanimously agreed by IOC members at the 127th Session in Monaco, many of the recommendations have already been implemented.
IOC financial statements are prepared and audited according to IFRS standards even if these higher standards are legally not required. The IOC will also produce an annual activity report, including the allowance policy for IOC members.
The transparency report will show that the IOC distributes 90 per cent of its revenues to the sporting movement and to the athletes.
President Bach told the Congress that: “we are always working for building bridges and never for erecting walls, that we follow this call for tolerance and solidarity.”
Please click here to read the full speech




Friday, 6 March 2015

Olympic.org news uploading suspended

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.


The following notation in internet browsing pages flashing immediately after starting to download the news in the Blog. The International law in cyber crime is not responding in India. The cyber law is totally violation with pop up and other tracking devices are on looking to stop the data transfer with a intention to create a mass problem among the public by the service proprietors to generate illegal fund or money to make satisfy themselves.


HTTP Error 404 - File or Directory not found

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

IOC President meets Rio youngsters for fencing 'master class'

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

IOC President meets Rio youngsters for fencing 'master class'
©IOC/Ian Jones (4)
28/02/2015
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach today met up with young fencers in Rio to put them through their paces.

A gold medalist in fencing at the Olympic Games Montreal 1976, Bach spoke to and crossed swords with many of the young athletes for more than an hour.


In all, about 30 fencing students welcomed the IOC President at the Clube Municipal Tijuca, which caters to young athletes between the ages of 5 and 17.