Namibia In Historic World Championship Breakthrough by Howard Harding
20 August 2013
- In what will be one of the southern African country's first ever
stagings of a world championship event, Namibia has won the rights to
host the 2014 WSF World Junior Squash Championships.
The World Squash
Federation event, which will include the Men's & Women's World
Junior Individual Championships in addition to the Men's World Junior
Team Championship, will be held in the capital Windhoek from 10-21
August 2014.
"We are proud and
excited that Namibia has been awarded the rights to host the 2014
edition of the World Junior Squash Championships, in Windhoek," said
Tyc Kakehongo, the Tournament Director for Desert Events Namibia on
behalf of the Namibian Squash Association. "This is the first event of
this magnitude to be hosted in our country and we look forward to
welcoming juniors from all over the world to our beautiful country.
"The main objective
for the Namibian Squash Association remains to promote squash as a
choice of sport for the general public. By hosting a global show-piece
of the sport, we hope this will give a major boost to our vision of
mass participation from the full spectrum of our communities and leave
behind a legacy that will see many Namibians - especially our youth -
take up a fun and exciting sport."
The championships have
Namibian government support: "We are excited to be part of the process
to bring such a major international event to Namibia," said Sivute
Katamba, Chief Administrator of the Namibian Sport Commission on behalf
of the Ministry of Sport.
WSF President N
Ramachandran added: "For our World Junior Championships to be awarded
to Namibia next year after Qatar in 2012 and Poland this year
illustrates further the breadth of enthusiasm for squash - something of
which we are very proud.
"I have no doubt that the championships in Windhoek will be a resounding success."
President Ramachandran (left) pictured above with Tyc Kakehongo at the 2013 World Junior Championships in Mulhouse, France
The venues proposed to
host the championships are the Wanderers Squash Club - the home of
squash in Namibia - and a new multi-sport complex earmarked for
completion in the first quarter of 2014.
Namibia becomes only the third African country, after Egypt and South Africa, to host a world squash championship.