How Are You
Doing, Sport!
By Our Correspondent
The 27th Olympic Games began
in the Australian capital Friday amidst a sizzling opening ceremony where more than 11,000
athletes from 199 countries marched past with hopes of winning a medal or breaking a world
record.
Representing Nepal, five
athletes and accompanying officials dressed in the traditional daura suruwal and sari
marched into Sydneys Stadium Australia behind the Nepalese flag, to the cheers of
HRH Crown Prince Dipendra and a crowd that packed the arena.
The grand opening ceremony
began with the lighting of the Olympic flame by Aboriginal runner Cathy Freeman, 27,
Australias gold medal hope in the 400m and 200 m.
The Olympic flame had arrived
after a 100-day journey across the world and will be lit for the next two weeks. According
to the media, the Olympic opening ceremony bonanza set a new standard.
It was a three-hour
celebration of Australian culture and history without the stereotypes, no kangaroos or
koalas in sight. With a massive 12,694 performers, a symphony orchestra, a huge array of
props, horses, not to mention the superstars, it was the biggest ever.
The glitter that awaited the
Nepalese team in Sydney was, however, overshadowed by the controversy surrounding the
entourage before their departure.
Unlike on previous occasions,
there was no warm farewell on Monday for the Nepalese delegates. The officials
accompanying the athletes boarded the plane separately, almost in secrecy, should they
have to face the press.
It is customary of the
Nepalese to bid farewell to those going abroad by garlanding and putting a tika on the
forehead. But the officials failed to turn up for the occasion at the airport.
Nepal is fielding just five
athletes in three disciplines, but they are accompanied by 16 officials some with their
wives.
Just days before leaving, the
athletes at a press meet also slammed the officials for the meagre daily allowances. The
athletes were to get only US$ 8 a day, while high-ranking officials were pocketing US$ 100
a day. Other officials were to receive US$ 22.50.
The National Sports Council
employees were planning to stop the Nepalese delegates from flying to Sydney to press for
their salaries which have not been paid for the past three months. But member secretary of
the NSC and chef-de-mission of the Nepalese Sydney Olympic team had stopped them from
doing so, assuring them that they would receive their salaries for Dasain.
Nepal is fielding the Olympic
squad at a cost of Rs. 5 million.
The NOC had never informed
the press regarding the training and progress activities of the Nepalese players.
The squad does not include a
journalist.
Controversies are nothing new
to Nepals sporting bodies. But the present controversy where officials and athletes
part ways even before boarding the plane to the Games is unprecedented.
Oil Prices May
Go Up
By K. P. Sharma
In the wake of a worldwide
hike in petroleum prices, and a raise expected in India with which Nepal shares a long
open border, anytime soon, Nepal may have little option other than to follow suit. As a
relief, however, Nepal Oil Corporation is willing to wait until after Dasain, the
Hindus greatest festival that is celebrated in October. Hopefully, by then, oil
prices will have lowered from the US $ 35 it now costs a barrel.
India is expected to raise
fuel prices soon after its Premier Atal Behari Vajpayee returns from the United States
where he is meeting President Clinton after attending the Millennium Summit of the United
Nations in New York.
An oil price hike in India is
inevitable as Indian Oil minister has already hinted at this. India, he says, is unable to
bear US$ 14 billion in subsidy. India consumes nearly 100 million metric tons of petroleum
products a year.
Nepal consumes about 800,000
metric tons of petroleum products a year 350,000 kilo liters of kerosene, 350,000
kilo liters of diesel, 60,000 kilo liters of petrol, 65,000 kilo liters of aviation fuel,
30,000 kilo liters of furnace oil and 36,000 metric tons of cooking gas.
Only last November the NOC
had increased the price of diesel and kerosene by 48 and 23 per cent respectively. And
that had led to a 30 per cent increase in the fare of public transportation.
Still, Managing Director of
Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) Madan Raj Sharma says that NOC is subsidizing these products.
"Kerosene is the costliest, but we must provide it at a very cheap price," he
says.
The paradox is that a litre
of kerosene is sold at Rs. 13 in the country while it costs at least Rs. 20 at Kuwait
port.
According to Sharma, the real
price of a liter of kerosene works out to nearly Rs. 25.
The price of pol products has
been increasing at an alarming rate since last year. Only last year, a ton of crude oil
was available for US$ 180. It now costs US$ 350.
"Since there is nearly a
cent per cent rise in the price, Nepal must face the crisis squarely," Sharma says.
The unanimous decision of the Organisation of Petrol Exporting Countries (OPEC) to raise
prices has rocked the world market. It does not hurt their economy because they consume
less of the product as they are not industrialized nations. OPEC countries meet about 40
per cent of the world requirement for petroleum products.
Meanwhile, US and other
countries are putting pressure on OPEC, especially Saudi Arabia, to increase production of
crude oil. World pressure to up oil output is expected to bring some relief soon.
The prices could stabilize if
the production of crude oil is raised to 1.5 million barrels a day from the existing
800,000 barrels. The price of a barrel of oil will then stabilize at US$ 20-24.
Whether oil prices stabilize
or not, NOC may in the near future have little option other than to raise its own prices.
The subsidy it provides has been mounting year after year, and it is no more in a position
to do so. Its the social obligation that is hindering NOC from raising prices.
"If we sell kerosene in
todays price when international price of kerosene is 43 US $ per barrel in
Singapore, we will lose 7 billion rupees a year," Sharma says.
Meanwhile, responding to
rumours regarding NOCs plan to fix dual prices for cooking gas one for tempo
opeators and for for domestic consumtion DG Sharma told Sunday Despatch that it has
no immediate plans to do so. "We want to do it, but it is very difficult to
monitor." |