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France to boost sport practice ahead of Paris 2024 Olympics
French President Emmanuel Macron poses with youths at a basketball playground in Tremblay-en-France, outside Paris, Thursday, Oct.14, 2021. French President Emmanuel Macron will promote sports ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. (AP Photo/Francois Mori, Pool)

France to boost sport practice ahead of Paris 2024 Olympics

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that the government will help fund 5,000 local facilities to allow more people to practice sports, especially in the country’s poorest areas, ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympics.

The announcement came hours before Macron was scheduled to play in a charity soccer match to raise money for the Hospitals’ Foundation, alongside former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger.

The government will provide more than 200 million euros ($232 million) to help local authorities finance about 1,000 judo dojos, 1,000 city parks, some basketball courts and handball fields, small mobile swimming pools and other facilities by 2024, Macron said.

The move aims at remedying an “injustice,” he said. “It is often in the poorest … areas that these facilities are missing.”

The package will focus on funding sport practice in working-class suburbs and rural areas.

Also Thursday, Macron visited a sports center along with French former NBA player Tony Parker, and the construction site of the future Olympic Village in Paris’ northern suburbs.

In a speech at the headquarters of the Paris 2024 Organizing Committee, Macron said the budget and schedule have so far been respected in the preparations for the Games.

He called for the Paris Olympics to be “inclusive” and environment-friendly, and voiced hope that they will bring France “lots of medals, show our social and environmental excellence, create lots of jobs and housing.”

Macron has strongly supported the Olympic project since being elected in 2017, weeks before Paris was confirmed as the future host. The city’s first Olympics since 1924 are set to have a budget of 6.8 billion euros ($7.9 billion).