By Karolos Grohmann
BERLIN (Reuters) – Hamburg’s bid to host
the 2024 summer Olympics hinges on the result of a referendum on Sunday,
with city officials hoping for a strong show of support to boost the
chances of Germany’s Olympic newcomer staging the Games.
The
northern port city beat Berlin in March to win the German nod and is
proposing a compact inner-city concept that bid officials say meets the
International Olympic Committee’s recent reforms aimed making the Games
cheaper and more sustainable.
Hamburg is the only one of the five
candidates to put its plans to a city vote. Rome, Paris, Los Angeles —
all past Olympic hosts — and Budapest are in the running as well, with
the IOC to pick the winner in 2017.
“An event the size of the
Olympics can only be staged in agreement with the citizens and the
government,” said Hamburg mayor Olaf Scholz, who cast his mail vote
earlier this week and hopes for a “strong majority result”.
Hamburg’s
concept involves the Games being held in the Kleiner Grasbrook area,
technically an island but only a 10-minute walk from the city center,
that would become the Olympic park and offer short distances to the
competition venues for athletes and spectators.
The bid needs a
simple majority, as well as at least 20 percent of the registered
electorate casting a ‘Yes’ vote if Hamburg is to continue with its
two-year campaign.
Critics say the 7.4 billion euro ($ 7.86
billion) project would be an environmental and financial burden at a
time when major sports organizations like world soccer’s governing body
FIFA are faced with global corruption, bribery and doping scandals.
The
continuing influx of refugees and increased security fears following
the Paris attacks have raised further questions over whether an Olympic
bid currently makes sense.
The bid is opposed by some
environmental and citizens’ groups including Friends of the Earth
Germany as well as Hamburg’s second division soccer club St Pauli, whose
members voted against it this month.
Germany’s soccer association
(DFB) is also mired in a bribery scandal that Hamburg bid chief Nikolas
Hill admitted was doing the Hamburg candidacy no favors.
A poll
conducted this month before the Paris attacks showed support for the
Games at 56 percent, seven percent lower than two months earlier.
The
German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) commissioned a nationwide
poll after the Paris attacks, noting support had risen for the Games.
“I
see a clear positive tendency along the lines of ‘especially now’,”
DOSB President Alfons Hoermann told reporters. “The majority seems to
share our opinion that fear is not a prospect.”
($ 1 = 0.9420 euros)
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Ian Chadband)
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