BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Istanbul's Olympic bid chief on Tuesday
brushed aside fears that a potential military intervention in
neighboring Syria could upset the Turkish city's hopes of staging the
2020 Games.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) will vote
on Saturday in Buenos Aires to decide whether Istanbul, Madrid or Tokyo
will be awarded the world's biggest and most expensive sporting event.
But the possibility of a U.S. military strike against the Syrian
government has prompted questions about whether Istanbul could be a
risky choice.
"This is a global issue ... now the world leaders
are dealing with it," Turkish bid chief Hasan Arat told Reuters when
asked whether unrest in the region could harm the city's chances.
Istanbul is vying to be the first Muslim country
to stage the Olympics and Arat said the Games would be a boon for the
Middle East.
"This bid is so important for my country ... for my region," he said.
But geopolitics could weigh on Turkey, which has felt the strain of a refugee exodus from Syria's civil war.
More than 2 million refugees have fled Syria, the United Nations said
earlier on Tuesday, calling the crisis "the tragedy of the century.
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