TTOC welcome IOC President
Monday 17 March is a big day for the Trinidad and
Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC).The TTOC will host Dr
Jacques Rogge ,The International Olympic
Committee(IOC) president for four hours .Rogge arrives
in Trinidad at 2.30pm .
The IOC president will pay a courtesy call(3.30pm) on
his Excellency Professor George Maxwell
Richards,President of the Republic of Trinidad and
Tobago.
The TTOC will host a reception(4 pm) for Dr.Rogge at
the Hyatt Regency Hotel,Minister of Sport and Youth
Affairs,The Honourable Gary Hunt will attend.
The IOC president will be accompanied by IOC
member,Mario Vazquez Rana,president of the Association
of National Olympic Committees(ANOC) and Pan American
Sport Organisation(PASO).
Rogge,a Belgian, was elected IOC president in 2001.
An orthopedic surgeon by profession. He competed in
yachting in the 1968, 1972 and 1976 Summer Olympics,
and played on the Belgian national rugby union team.
His term began at a difficult time for the IOC,as the
Salt Lake Winter Olympic Games bribery scandal was
very much in the headlines and he was stepping into
the shoes of Juan Antonio Samaranch.
At the 2002 winter Olympic games in Salt Lake city he
became the first IOC president to stay in the Olympic
Village.
He made it clear early in his mandate that he would
have zero tolerance for unethical behavior .He has
advocated for a review of the Olympic programme and
has openly voiced his view that the games is too big
and complex and that he would like Africa and Latin
America to be able to host an Olympic games.
Rogge's determination for the Olympics to appeal to
youth has been a rallying call in his seven-year
presidency.
His long-held ambition for a young people's Games will
be realised with the inaugural Youth Olympics in
Singapore in 2010.
Rogge's mild manner and natural diplomacy masks a
steely determination.In 1980, the former Soviet Union
had invaded Afghanistan and President Jimmy Carter
called for a U.S. boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics,
Belgium intended to follow suit as a NATO ally.
However, as the leader of his country's Olympic team,
Rogge believed that politics should be kept separate
from sport.He insisted that Belgium compete.
He was called before his government to explain his
stance, and public funding for the team was denied.
Still, Rogge held his ground, and the Belgian Olympic
team traveled to Moscow.
His leadership and people management ability stood out
during his chairmanship of the IOC Coordinating
Commission for the 2000 Sydney and 2004 Athens Olympic
Games.
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