sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Madrid says hosting 2020 Olympics would create jobs in recession-hit Spain

MADRID - Hosting the Olympics in 2020 would help create jobs in a country grappling with recession, a deep financial crisis and 25 per cent unemployment, leaders of Madrid's bid said Tuesday.
BID305-17_2013_151637_high.jpg
Gilbert Felli, IOC executive director, left, Anna Botella, Mayor of Madrid, center, Jacqueline Barrett, IOC head of bid cities relations, right, pose in the IOC headquarter as they submit the candidature bid of 2020 Madrid Olympic summer games at the International Olympic Committee, IOC, headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, Monday, Jan. 7, 2013. The International Olympic Committee announced that Istanbul, Tokyo and Madrid have made it on to the short list of cities bidding to host the 2020 Olympic Games. (AP Photo/Keystone, Jean-Christophe Bott)

MADRID - Hosting the Olympics in 2020 would help create jobs in a country grappling with recession, a deep financial crisis and 25 per cent unemployment, leaders of Madrid's bid said Tuesday.

"We can afford this, we can solve the difficulties and we can build a wonderful games," Spanish Olympic Committee President Alejandro Blanco said at the city's town hall.

Blanco spoke a day after Madrid submitted its full bid proposals to the International Olympic Committee, which will select the host city on Sept. 7 in Buenos Aires. Madrid, which is bidding for a third straight time, is competing against Istanbul and Tokyo.

Following the collapse of the nation's property market in 2008, ordinary Spaniards and many of the country's banks were left struggling under the weight of toxic loans.

The government introduced stinging austerity measures in a bid to avoid having to seek a bailout similar to those given to Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Cyprus, and many citizens have protested in marches against what they say are moves to degrade vital public services.

Madrid Mayor Ana Botella said the bid includes a frugal and realistic $1.9 billion infrastructure budget made possible by use of many existing facilities, with only four permanent venues still to be built.

She said the bid features "austerity as one of our axes."

Madrid failed in bids for the 2012 and 2016 Olympics, which went to London and Rio de Janeiro.

Regional government president Ignacio Gonzalez noted that London Games had created 20,000 steady jobs.

"One of the most important aspects of this bid is job creation," Gonzalez said

Culture and Sports Minister Jose Ignacio Wert said promoting fair play was also a key issue, and the government was drafting new anti-doping legislation to protect against cheating.

While one of Spain's doping laboratories was suspended for three months on Dec. 22 by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), Wert said new practices were already in place.

Wert said Spain's stance on doping would be "one of the strengths of our bid."