The Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) has promised Cambodia sustained
logistical and financial support over the next few years to augment the
Kingdom’s sports development resources.
The OCA will be lining up two new initiatives
while extending its ongoing support for the creation of a state-of-the-art
Sports Science and Medicine Centre in Phnom Penh, which is expected to be
operational by April next year. The OCA funded the construction of an Aquatics
Centre in Kampot two years ago.
Assurances of backing for the National Olympic
Committee of Cambodia came from none other than OCA President Sheikh Mohammed
Al Fahad Al Sabah during a meeting with NOCC President Thong Khon and NOCC
Secretary-General Vath Chamroeun on the sidelines of 31st OCA General Assembly
in Macau last week.
According to the NOCC, Asian Olympic family
members will gather in Phnom Penh next year for the OCA Fun Run to promote
harmony and better understanding. “The OCA fun run will be a rare and wonderful
opportunity for the NOCC to showcase the progress we have made in the last
three to four years and to strengthen working relationships with many of our
fraternal member nations,” Vath Chamroeun told the Post yesterday.
“The OCA President, who is also the Chairman of
the International Olympic Solidarity Commission and President of the
Association of National Olympic Committees, was very appreciative of our
developmental efforts and he assured us of all possible help.”
OCA funding will also be made available for
Cambodia to set up a centre in Siem Reap for women’s sports, a cause the NOCC
has championed since 2011.
While Southeast Asia’s focus at the assembly in
Macau was clearly on the race between Hanoi and Surabaya for the 2019 Asian
Games, the Cambodian delegation, which supported Hanoi, had clearly set its
sights on a futuristic agenda of its own.
Apart from meeting several International Olympic
Committee field experts, the NOCC top brass managed to earn pledges of support
from the Olympic Solidarity Movement in areas of infrastructure development,
training programes for athletes and coaches besides administration and human
resource development.
NOCC President Thong Khon is understood to have
been immensely pleased with all the positives that came out of the trip to the
former Portuguese colony.
“It went very well for us and I am happy that the
Asian Olympic family is standing by us,” added Vath Chamreoun. “This has
certainly inspired us to do more for sports development and prepare us better
in achieving our goal of hosting a mega event like the SEA Games.”
The next significant international engagement for
the Secretary-General is a trip to Incheon later this month for an
organisational preview meeting ahead of next year’s Asian Indoor Martial Arts
Games.
This unique event features all of the martial art
forms which are not among medal events at the Asian Games.
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