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GANEFO

Games of The New Emerging Forces
Motto Onward, No Retreat!
Formation 1962–1967
Type Sporting event organization
Purpose To boycott the International Olympic Committee after the suspension of Indonesia from that organization
Headquarters Jakarta, Indonesia
Membership
51 active members
Official language
English
and host country's official language when necessary
Federation cofounder
Indonesia President Sukarno
1st Games of the New Emerging Forces
Host city Jakarta, Indonesia
Nations participating 51
Athletes participating 2,700
Opening ceremony 10 November 1963 (1963-11-10)
Closing ceremony 22 November 1963 (1963-11-22)
Officially opened by President Sukarno
Main venue Gelora Bung Karno Stadium
2nd Asian GANEFO
Host city Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Nations participating 17
Athletes participating 2,000
Opening ceremony 25 November 1966 (1966-11-25)
Closing ceremony 6 December 1966 (1966-12-06)
Officially opened by Norodom Sihanouk

The Games of the New Emerging Forces (GANEFO) were the games set up by Indonesia as a counter to the Olympic Games. Established for the athletes of the so-called "emerging nations" (mainly newly independent socialist states), GANEFO was the name given both to the games held in Jakarta in 1963 and the 36-member sporting federation established the same year. A second GANEFO scheduled for Cairo in 1967 was cancelled and GANEFO had only one subsequent event, an "Asian GANEFO" held in Phnom Penh in 1966.

Indonesia established GANEFO in the aftermath of IOC censure for the politically charged 4th edition of Asian Games in 1962 in Jakarta which Indonesia hosted and for which Taiwan and Israel were refused entry cards. The IOC's eventual reaction was to indefinitely suspend Indonesia from the IOC. Indonesia had “thrown down a challenge to all international amateur sports organizations, which cannot very well be ignored,” in the words of IOC president Avery Brundage. This was the first time the IOC suspended one of its members, although Indonesia was readmitted in time for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

Ten countries (Cambodia, China, Guinea, Indonesia, Iraq, Mali, Pakistan, Vietnam, and the USSR) announced plans to form GANEFO in April 1963, and 36 countries signed on as members in November 1963. GANEFO made it clear in its constitution that politics and sport were intertwined; this ran against the doctrine of the International Olympic Committee, which strove to separate politics from sport. Indonesian president Sukarno responded that the IOC was itself political because it did not have the People's Republic of China or North Vietnam as members; the IOC was simply "a tool of the imperialists and colonialists." Nevertheless, the IOC decreed that the athletes attending GANEFO would be ineligible to participate in the Olympic Games.


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