Jakarta dreams of hosting Olympics as Asian Games conclude

Published September 3, 2018
JAKARTA: Fireworks explode during the closing ceremony for the 18th Asian Games on Sunday.—AP
JAKARTA: Fireworks explode during the closing ceremony for the 18th Asian Games on Sunday.—AP

JAKARTA: The 18th Asian Games closed in a glittering ceremony in Jakarta on Sunday as hosts Indonesia dreamed of stepping up to host the Olympics in 2032.

Thousands of athletes in ponchos marched in heavy rain at the Gelora Bung Karno stadium at the close of the two-week tournament featuring 40 sports.

“You did it! You made the energy of Asia come through,” Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah, president of the Olympic Council of Asia, told the packed crowd.

“Jakarta has the capability to host any such major international event,” added the sheikh, who performed the heart-shaped ‘Mobot’ by placing both hands on top of his head.

It added to the relaxed atmosphere of the ceremony, which was mainly devoted to music acts from Indonesia, India and South Korea while booming fireworks lit up the night sky.

Indonesia has defied expectations to host a smooth Games, which with 17,000 athletes and officials is second in size only to the Olympics.

Despite worries about terrorism and unfinished venues, most problems have been minor — including a series of hiccups over ticketing, for which Vice-President Jusuf Kalla apologised in his ceremony speech.

Riding high on the Games’ success, President Joko Widodo on Saturday announced a bid to hold the 2032 Olympics, which would have seemed unthinkable just a few weeks ago.

The president addressed the ceremony by video link from an emergency shelter in Lombok, where a string of earthquakes in recent weeks killed 555 people.

Olympics chief Thomas Bach has welcomed Indonesia’s bid but he warned that the sprawling Southeast Asian country needed to maintain the positive energy generated by the Games.

“I think what is important now for Indonesia is to keep the momentum of this Games,” he said earlier on Sunday. “So for you now not to fall into a black hole the moment after everybody has left.”

China topped the medals table for the 10th Games in succession, a streak stretching back to New Delhi 1982, with a runaway 132 golds.

They will now look to make a deafening statement by repeating the feat at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, capital of their war-time colonisers and bitter rivals Japan.

Japan, who won the Games’ 465th and final gold medal in Sunday’s mixed team triathlon, placed a distant second with 75 golds, while South Korea had 49 and hosts Indonesia finished with 31.

Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee, who became the first woman to win six gold medals at a single Games, was named the best athlete or Most Valuable Player.

“I still haven’t won a world title so that’s my next goal,” she said after a small awards ceremony on Sunday.

The 18-year-old, who looks set to be the face of the Tokyo 2020 Games, stole the limelight at the pool from China’s triple Olympic champion Sun Yang and Singaporean butterfly hero Joseph Schooling.

Premier League star Son Heung-min’s joyous celebration at winning football gold, a title that earned him an exemption from military service in South Korea, will live long in the memory.

Tobacco and banking billionaire Michael Bambang Hartono, one of Indonesia’s richest men, was the Games’ oldest medallist at 78, in the card game bridge. He is 66 years older than 12-year-old Indonesian skateboarder Bunga Nyimas, whose bronze medal in the street event made her the youngest athlete to mount a podium.

They were part of a bumper Games for Indonesia, whose 31 golds was a record for a Southeast Asian country and who, more importantly, proved the critics wrong by hosting a successful tournament.

Although there were complaints over air pollution, traffic and a pre-Games police crackdown that killed dozens, the venues were ready on time and most events went off smoothly.

It came after the 2011 Southeast Asian Games in Indonesia were plagued by corruption and delays — and may have put the country in line to host the biggest tournament of all, the Olympics.

Final medals table

(Tabulated under gold, silver, bronze, total):

China 132 92 65 289

Japan 75 56 74 205

South Korea 49 58 70 177

Indonesia 31 24 43 98

Uzbekistan 21 24 25 70

Iran 20 20 22 62

Taiwan 17 19 31 67

India 15 24 30 69

Kazakhstan 15 17 44 76

North Korea 12 12 13 37

Bahrain 12 7 7 26

Thailand 11 16 46 73

Hong Kong 8 18 20 46

Malaysia 7 13 16 36

Qatar 6 4 3 13

Mongolia 5 9 11 25

Vietnam 4 16 18 38

Singapore 4 4 14 22

Philippines 4 2 15 21

UAE 3 6 5 14

Kuwait 3 1 2 6

Kyrgyzstan 2 6 12 20

Jordan 2 1 9 12

Cambodia 2 0 1 3

Saudi Arabia 1 2 3 6

Macau 1 2 2 5

Iraq 1 2 0 3

United Korea 1 1 2 4

Lebanon 1 1 2 4

Tajikistan 0 4 3 7

Laos 0 2 3 5

Turkmenistan 0 1 2 3

Nepal 0 1 0 1

Pakistan 0 0 4 4

Afghanistan 0 0 2 2

Myanmar 0 0 2 2

Syria 0 0 1 1

Published in Dawn, September 3rd, 2018

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