Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Online marketplace of Manufacturers & Wholesalers
Chinese(GB) Chinese(BIG5) Deutsch     
  Home
  National
  Politics
  Government
  Law
  Sci&Edu
  Rural
  Local
  World
  World Biz
  Asia - Pacific
  Africa
  Americas
  Europe
  Middle east
  Business
  Macro-economy
  Enterprise
  Industries
  Markets
  Equities
  Currencies
  Commodities
  Life
  Social
  Sports
  Health
  Environment
  Arts & heritage
  Entertainment
  Insight

 
National / Government Email this Article  Print this Article 
Most 2008 Olympic tickets will be "cheap": chief organizer 
Last Updated(Beijing Time):2006-08-07 09:14
 

Liu Qi, President of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2008 Olympic Games (BOCOG), speaks during an interview.(File photo/Xinhua)
Liu Qi, President of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2008 Olympic Games (BOCOG), speaks during an interview.(File photo/Xinhua)

The head of the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee for the 2008 Olympic Games (BOCOG) has said there will be more than 7 million tickets up for sale and most of the tickets will be cheap.

"Excluding those reserved for the 'Olympic family', which includes sponsors, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and sports federation officials, over 7 million tickets will be sold to the general public," said BOCOG chief Liu Qi.

"We will start to sell tickets to contracted corporate clients in September, and tickets will go on sale to the public in the first half of next year," he added.

As the quardennially-held games, Olympic Games is the world's most popular sporting event, many local citizens are afraid that they cannot afford to watch the competitions.

Liu said the organizers have taken into consideration "the situations of China" when setting the prices.

"Except for the opening and closing ceremonies and a few popular events, the majority of tickets will be very, very cheap," said Liu.

"We hope that all Chinese have a chance to come and watch the Games."

Liu said BOCOG will unveil the prices for the Games pending final approval from the IOC.

Within China, people can purchase tickets through an official ticketing agent which has yet to be named, Liu said. All others will have to buy tickets through their corresponding national Olympic committee.

Source:Xinhuanet 
© China Economic Net.  All rights reserved.
About us | Feedback | Contact