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.The 2017 (: Sukan Asia Tenggara 2017), officially known as the 29th Southeast Asian Games (or simply 29th SEA Games;: Sukan Asia Tenggara ke-29 or Sukan SEA ke-29) and commonly known as Kuala Lumpur 2017, was a that took place in,. This was the sixth time that Malaysia hosted the games and its first time since. Previously, it had also hosted the, and editions of the games. The 2017 edition is most notable for being the first edition to include winter sports.The games were held from 19 to 30 August 2017, although several events had commenced from 14 August 2017. Around 4,646 athletes participated at the event, which featured 404 events in 38 sports.
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It was opened by the, at the.Hosts led the final medal tally, followed. Several games and national records were broken during the games. The games were deemed generally successful with the rising standard of competition amongst the Southeast Asian nations. Contents.Host city As per traditions, hosting duties are rotated among the SEA Games Federation (SEAGF) member countries.
Each country is assigned a year to host but may choose to do so or not.In July 2012, the SEAGF meeting in confirmed that would host the regional biennial event in 2017, should there be no other country willing to bid for the host job. (OCM) secretary general Sieh Kok Chi, who attended the meeting, said that would host the Games in 2013, followed by Singapore in 2015. It was to be 's turn but it expressed its interest to host the 2019 Games instead of the 2017 edition and thus this resulted in being chosen as the host for the 2017 Games.Development and preparation The Malaysia SEA Games Organising Committee (MASOC) was formed in 2015 to oversee the staging of the event.Costs Sports minister Khairy Jamaluddin in 2013 had hoped the cost of hosting the games would not exceed MYR80 million (USD18 million). But in 2016, the government budgeted the cost to not exceed MYR500 million while during the 2017 budget, the prime minister, who was also the finance minister, announced a RM450 million budget for hosting the games.In comparison, Singapore had spent about MYR740 million (SGD264 million, using the then SGD/MYR exchange rate of 2.80, as opposed to the current rate of 3.15) organising the games in 2015 while Myanmar was estimated to have spent about MYR1 billion in 2013. Venues The 2017 Southeast Asian Games was organised across several states in. All the existing venues in were upgraded while a new, costing MYR 80 million was built in, to host track cycling events and was completed on late March 2017 and opened on 26 May 2017.
Initially, and were considered for a number of events contested. However, the Chief Executive Officer of 2017 SEA Games, Zolkples Embong has decided not to involve the East Malaysian states, citing 'higher cost' as the main reason for not involving.More than RM1.6 billion has been allocated by the host country to turn the National Sports Complex in Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur, and its surrounding areas into a Sports City.
The first phase of the work will get the Bukit Jalil National Stadium ready to host the 2017 Southeast Asia Games.A games village was not built. Instead, a 'village in the city' concept saw athletes and officials housed in 33 hotels across Peninsular Malaysia.
Besides being physically near to the games venues, it was hoped that it will add vibe to the nation and reduce post-games costs in converting a dedicated games village to other uses.The 29th Southeast Asian Games had 44 venues for the games, 27 in Kuala Lumpur, 10 in Selangor, 3 in Putrajaya, 2 in Negeri Sembilan and 1 each in Terengganu and Kedah respectively. Kuala Lumpur 2017 medals.The medals of the games were designed by, which is also the designer company for the torch and the baton. They were announced on 30 May 2017, the same day announced as one of the games main sponsor which made MASOC's sponsorship total RM82.6 million, exceeded its sponsorship target of RM80 million. The medals have subtle curved surfaces, rims and edges, and are made of pewter with a disc of kempas wood integrated into the design. They featured the Southeast Asian Games Federation logo on the, and the games logo on the reverse.Baton relay. Baton of the Games.The games baton relay, dubbed the Rising Together Baton Run, is the first of its kind in the history of Southeast Asian Games.
It covered a distance of 10 kilometres on average in the 10 capital cities of the Southeast Asian Region countries, excluding the host country, passing through the landmarks of each countries' capital city. The baton relay began with Brunei on 5 March 2017, followed by the Philippines on 12 March, Laos on 18 March, Myanmar on 25 March, Thailand on 1 April, Vietnam on 9 April, East Timor on 17 April, Cambodia on 22 April and Indonesia on 30 April and ended with Singapore on 13 May 2017.
The games baton was designed by which sold the baton to the public at MYR 1480 and its design was inspired by the games' theme, rising together. Its design depicts shards and a triangular cross section. The baton has a length of 400 mm, a width of 44 mm, weighs approximately 600g and made up of materials which are a stave in kempas, a tawny wood native to Southeast Asia, and a satin-finished pewter finial. 13–18 May 01. Johor 18–21 May 02. Malacca 22–25 May 03. Negeri Sembilan 3–4 June 04.
Labuan 5–8 June 05. Sabah8–13 June 06. Sarawak 15–17 June 07.Perlis 17–20 June 08.Kedah 3–6 July 09.Penang 7–12 July 10.Perak13–17 July 11.Kelantan 17–23 July 12.Terengganu 24–30 July 13.Pahang 31 July – 5 August 14.Selangor 6–12 August 15.Putrajaya 16.Kuala Lumpur (host city)Sustainability As an aspect of staging the games, the Games organising committee committed to a focus on sustainability and environmental protection by launching the Kuala Lumpur 2017 Green Initiatives on 5 June 2017. Among the activities of the initiative is the ‘One Medal, One Tree’ programme aimed at having a total of 5,249 trees be planted in and around Kuala Lumpur Sports City, one for each medal awarded to winning athlete during the games which is divided into three phases. Other activities included providing waste recycling bins at games' main venue, providing public transportation and providing electric car facilities at selected spots of the games' main venue.Marketing. Rimau, a Malayan tiger, is the official mascot of the Games.
Motto The official motto of the 2017 Southeast Asian Games is 'Rising Together' or ' Bangkit Bersama' in Malay. It was chosen to highlight unity between the nations in Southeast Asia as well as to signify the Kuala Lumpur games as the first Southeast Asian Games to be held after the formation of the ASEAN Community in 2015.
Logo The logo of the 2017 Southeast Asian Games is an image of a, a crescent-shaped kite traditionally popular on the east coast of. The combination of stripes and colours of the logo were derived from the flags of all countries in Southeast Asia. A nationwide competition was held to select the logo of the games which saw a total of 174 entries submitted for the design competition. The Kuala Lumpur 2017 logo, made by combining the games' logo with the logo of is sometimes used by the organisers to reflect the common relationship as parallel games of one another with SEA Games being held for the able-bodied athletes and the ASEAN Para games held for the disabled athletes. Wau, the logo of Kuala Lumpur 2017 (Combination of SEA Games logo with logo Mascot The official mascot of the 2017 Southeast Asian Games is an anthropomorphic named Rimau. It was unveiled on 14 November 2015, together with the games' logo and theme. The mascot's name is not only a Malay word for Tiger, but also an abbreviation of the games' core values, namely: Respect, Integrity, Move, Attitude and Unity.
He is described as a gracious, friendly, competitive and athletic athlete. Songs The 2017 Southeast Asian Games had 4 theme songs. During the 100 day countdown celebration on 9 May 2017, Malaysians were requested by singer and composer Ramli MS to submit their ideas and stories related to the games' theme 'Rising Together' to social network websites through a crowdsourcing campaign to enable them to create the games theme song. On 8 August 2017, one theme song for the games has been released and is entitled 'Rising Together' (Bangkit Bersama).On 2 August 2017, a theme song titled 'Tunjuk Belang' (Show The Stripes) was released.
It was performed by monoloQue, Azlan Typewriter and maliQue. The song is described as a rock song which merges 'traditional and modern sounds'.
The composer and producer of the song is maliQue. The title of the song literally means showing off one's true colours in English and 'Belang' means stripes alluding to the mascot of the games, shown above.Another theme song was released earlier on 13 July 2017, titled 'So Many Hands' (Tangan-Tangan Yang Menjulang) and was performed by Mia Palencia in English and Asmidar in Malay which is the song of the Kuala Lumpur 2017 Promo Video, 'It Takes a Nation to Raise a Champion' (Bersama Kita Lahirkan Juara).A closing theme song for the Games, 'Together We Rise' was released on 30 August 2017. It was performed by and.Sponsors Dentsu Sports Asia, a subsidiary of and the Sportswork Group are the agencies of the 2017 Southeast Asian Games. The partnership of the two firms were announced on January 2016.
Dentsu is responsible for manages sponsorship matters involving international and Malaysian firms while Sportswork manages Malaysian government linked companiesThere are four tiers of sponsorship depending on the amount of funds a company contributes to the games. Bronze sponsors contributed 1 million or less, Silver sponsors contributed RM1 to 3 million. Gold sponsors contributed RM3 to 7.5 million and Platinum sponsors contributed RM7.5 to 15 million.A total of 39 sponsors, comprising 6 Platinum sponsors, 6 Gold sponsors, 9 Silver sponsors and 18 Bronze sponsors, contributed to the 2017 Southeast Asian Games.2017 Southeast Asian Games sponsorsTierSponsoring firmsPlatinum, ,Gold, Silver, SCGM BHD–Benxon, Spritzer,BronzeDouble Happiness, Maha Mas Medic, Maju Group, Marathon Thailand, Maxwin, MLS-Zimmer-Airflex, Nittaku, Sunstar, Trybe, Victor, WirakaThe Games Opening ceremony. The Opening Ceremony of the 29th Southeast Asian Games.The opening ceremony was held in on 19 August 2017 at 20:17 which highlighted aspects of Malaysia's history and culture. The ceremony was directed by film director alongside the Memories Entertainment creative team with co-operation from the.
The time 20:17 was chosen to start the opening ceremony to mark the year 2017, the year which Malaysia hosted the 29th Southeast Asian Games.The Games were officially declared open by the then of Malaysia, while diver lit the cauldron of the games. Closing ceremony The closing ceremony was held in Bukit Jalil National Stadium on 30 August 2017 at 21:30 MST (UTC+8). The closing ceremony coincided with the eve of the Malaysia's 60th celebrations. Like the opening ceremony, the closing ceremony was directed by film director alongside the Memories Entertainment creative team with co-operation from the Malaysian Armed Forces.The ceremony started with the Malaysian Armed Forces performing Negaraku, this time with in-suit performers as Rimau being the drummers, followed by the parade of athletes from 11 nations and Rimau entering the stage, with Malaysia entering first. The parade of volunteers started with the formation of the word 'WAU', symbolising the name of the volunteer programme, 'WAU Factor', followed by a video shot in the first-person's point of view of one volunteer helping in sports including basketball, athletics and gymnastics.
A cultural performance titled 'Terima Kasih Daun Keladi', an inspiration related to nature, was presented. A closing speech was given by the President of the Malaysian Olympic Council,. Prime Minister of Malaysia then declared the 2017 Southeast Asian Games closed, followed by extinguishing of the cauldron when and performed 'Together We Rise'. A video about the sports teams, featuring mostly Malaysian sports medalists and their families, was played, followed by the lowering of the SEA Games Federation flag by the. The Southeast Asian Games Federation flag was handed over from the Minister of the Youth and Sports of Malaysia to Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, chairman of the organising committee through Tunku Imran and the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) president Jose 'Peping' Cojuangco. The National Anthem of the Philippines, was played and the Philippines flag was raised, symbolising the hosting responsibilities being passed to Philippines. A video of the Philippines tourism was later shown.
The ceremony concluded through the integration of Malaysia's National Day eve celebration (the first in history inside the stadium), in a form of a concert of Malaysian songs from the 1950s to the 2010s, titled 'Soundtrack: Negaraku', featuring performances by local artists including, Salamiah Hassan, Azlan Typewriter, Dasha Logan, Amy Search, Siti Nordiana, Man Bai, Talitha Tan, Hijjaz, Zainal Abidin, Black,. After these performances, a video presentation was played, featuring quotations and photo montage of Malaysia's first Prime Minister.
Afterwards, PM Razak went to the main stage, wherein he gave a speech congratulating the organisers, regional guests and, especially, Malaysians who ended its campaign by collecting the highest number of gold medals. He then, just after midnight, surprised the audience in excitement by declaring 4 September a public holiday (a move he already planned during the games) as a reward for Malaysia's spectacular achievement.
Concluding his speech, PM Razak led the nation in chanting 'Merdeka!' Seven times to mark Malaysia's 60th year of Independence.
As with its annual traditions during National Day eve, Negaraku was played for the second time, this time, led by the Permata Seni Choir. To mark the games' historic moment, a We-fie photo-op was taken around the entire stadium.
The concert ended with four patriotic songs including the aforementioned artists' cover of Saya Anak Malaysia, Amy Search's Negaraku, Dayang Nurfaizah's cover of Sudiman's Warisan and Atai's performance of, to celebrate Malaysia's 60th Independence Day. Participating nations All 11 members of Southeast Asian Games Federation (SEAGF).
Below is a list of all the participating NOCs. (105). (169).
(535). (195). (844) (host). (405).
(497). (569). (818). (50).
(460)Sports On 16 June 2015, Chief Executive Officer for the 2017 SEA Games, Zolkples Embong said the staging of Olympic sports hopes will be part of the legacy of the SEA Games in Malaysia. He said that while it has always been the norm for host nations to select sports they are geared towards in an attempt to increase their haul of gold medals, the practice is not in line with the goals, which is to groom athletes from the region to compete at the Asian and Olympic Games. He gives an example of hosted by which included many non-Olympic sports and the host played to their advantage by being the overall winners with 182 gold medals. However, Indonesia only won 47 gold medals in. He added, in terms of the number and type of sports, Malaysia may not include non-Olympic sports like and sailing’s optimist race in 2017.As of February 2016, the sports of Archery, BMX cycling, Wrestling, Triathlon, Judo, Muaythai, Canoeing, Bodybuilding and Fencing were removed from the preliminary shortlist of the sporting disciplines to be played at the 2017 SEA Games. Also removed from the list are the women's events in boxing, billiards and snooker, sanda, and weightlifting and 8 events in Athletics. National Olympic Committees from the 11 participating countries had until 9 March appealed to reinclude the delisted sports in the shortlist.On 12 May 2016, a meeting between Olympic Council of Malaysia and Paralympic Council of Malaysia, chaired by sports minister Khairy Jamaluddin was held to propose the merger of the 2017 Southeast Asian Games and the into a single games which if approved will integrate the para sports into the games' main programme.
The same topic was also discussed at the Asean Para Sports Federation Board of Governors meeting on 7 June 2016. By 14 July, the proposal has been rejected by SEA Games Federation (SEAGF) Council, with 9 member countries have opposed the proposal while only two (Malaysia and Laos) agreed, citing the reason for the rejection was due to the tradition and culture that has long been maintained by SEAGF.38 sports with 404 events in all for the Games were included in the final list approved by the SEAGF on 14 July 2016. Winter sports were introduced for the first time in Games history. Source: Medal change (Possible)Malaysian gold medalists Wendy Ng Yan Yee (aquatics - diving), Thai gold medalists Nurisan Loseng (pencak silat), and Thai silver medalists Benjaporn Sriphanomthorn (aquatics - swimming) tested positive for a banned drug and was stripped of their medals. Collin Syquia (equestrian) of the Philippines was also stripped of his gold medal after his horse Andrew E tested positive for a banned substance. Ruling dateSportEventNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal2017Women's 3 metre springboard–1–1Women's synchronised 3 metre springboard–1–1+1−104×200 m freestyle relay–1–1+1–1010 km open water–1–1+1–10Women's team–1–1+1–102018Individual jumping–1–1+1–10.
Change in medal table will only officially be confirmed after the release of the report.Broadcasting During the Games, which will be held from 19 to 30 August 28 sports events will be broadcast live. The games also available internationally via whose broadcast was done by International Games Broadcast Services (IGBS) as part of SEA Games Television (SGTV) team. The International Broadcast Centre was located at Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre (MITEC).Key. Host nation (Malaysia)2017 SEA Games Broadcasters rights in Southeast AsiaIOC CodeCountryBroadcast networkTelevision networkRadio networkDigital networkBRUCAMINA(Indonesia futsal team matches only)Emtek (, )LAOMAS.(RTM)RTM (MyKlik)Media Prima (Tonton)Astro (Astro Go & NJOI Now)HyppTV (HyppTV Everywhere)MYAPHISGPMediacorp (Toggle)THA(TPT),True IDTLSAsiansport Channel NetworkAsiansportRadio Timor LesteVIE,Concerns and controversies. 1 April 2017.
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^ Joseph Sipalan; Ebrahim Harris; Nick Mulvenney (3 August 2017). Retrieved 1 May 2018. ^ Muhammad Faiz Baharin; R.
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Felix Nathaniel (16 August 2017). 55th Indonesia's Independence Day, TVRI broadcasting SEA Games live (in Indonesian).
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Bola.okezone.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 18 October 2018. ^ Wan Syamsul Amly (10 August 2017).
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Nyi Nyi Thet; Guan Zhen Tan (25 August 2017). Retrieved 26 August 2017.External links. (in English).Preceded byXXIX Southeast Asian Games (2017)Succeeded.
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Dependenciesscala-library, scala-collection-compat_2.12, slf4j-api,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!
util-slf4j-api_2.11 from group com.twitter (version 20.3.0)
Artifactutil-slf4j-api_2.11
Groupcom.twitter
Version 20.3.0
Last update 08. March 2020
Newest version Yes
Organization com.twitter
URLhttps://github.com/twitter/util
LicenseApache License, Version 2.0
Dependencies amount 3
Dependenciesscala-library, scala-collection-compat_2.11, slf4j-api,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!
Groupcom.twitter
Version 20.3.0
Last update 08. March 2020
Newest version Yes
Organization com.twitter
URLhttps://github.com/twitter/util
LicenseApache License, Version 2.0
Dependencies amount 3
Dependenciesscala-library, scala-collection-compat_2.11, slf4j-api,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!
slf4j-api from group org.netbeans.external (version RELEASE113)
Artifactslf4j-api
Grouporg.netbeans.external
Version RELEASE113
Last update 21. February 2020
Newest version Yes
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
There are maybe transitive dependencies!
Grouporg.netbeans.external
Version RELEASE113
Last update 21. February 2020
Newest version Yes
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
There are maybe transitive dependencies!
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