Brazil regards airports as key challenge
Updated: 2013-04-17 08:00
By Agence France-Presse in Recife, Brazil (China Daily)
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Organizing committee boss still confident about World Cup success
Brazil faces a major challenge in modernizing its airports ahead of next year's World Cup and will make available both civilian and military airfields for the teams, a government official said.
"The big problem" for the tournament is "the quality of airports", Luis Fernandes, the government representative on the World Cup's Local Organizing Committee said in an interview with foreign correspondents in the northeastern city of Recife on Sunday.
The work to completely upgrade the airports will be finished in 2018 and the 32 squads and officials will be able to use civilian and military airports, Fernandes said.
Fernandes, who is also executive secretary in the sports ministry, said the tournament offers great development opportunities for Brazil and he insisted the country will stage an "excellent" World Cup with a "Brazilian touch".
"FIFA must guarantee the success of the event but we (the government) must also ensure that it helps the development of the regions and the country. This is why we chose to have 12 host cities instead of eight. All are tourist hubs who will benefit from the infrastructure improvements (ports, airports, urban mobility, telecommunications)."
The federal government is to invest $15 billion in the World Cup and this June's Confederations Cup. These events are expected to raise the country's international profile. Brazil also wants to boost its tourism to lure investments. It expects a 0.5 percent hike annually in the national GDP as a result of these sporting events (including the 2016 Olympics).
Will everything be ready in time?
Meanwhile, the stadiums are of vital importance. Six will be operational for the Confederations Cup in June. But there have been delays. Only two were ready in December, which was the initial deadline, and the four others will be by the end of April.
"We will have to conduct (FIFA) tests of the facilities in parallel rather than in sequences, but they will all be carried out. The same thing will happen for the 2014 World Cup. Every six months, we will take stock," Fernandes said.
"Our major problem is the quality of the airports. The modernization plan runs until 2018. But for 2014, they (airports) will operate well and military airports will be used to welcome officials and to park the planes. Foreign teams will be able to fly into both civilian and military airports."
As for his organization's relationship with FIFA, Fernandes said: "We have been very firm in our negotiations with FIFA, but we had to remain open because we want to ensure the success of the game.
"The government had to be represented on the organizing committee. The relationship improved a lot as a result."
(China Daily 04/17/2013 page22)
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