The Olympic Games are the most coveted sporting event
of the world. After every four years, the Games of the Olympiad and the
Winter Olympic Games are organized at a mammoth level. The modern
international multi-sport event began in 1896 with French educator Baron
Pierre de Coubertin finally reviving the ancient Olympics. The supreme
authority governing and organizing the Olympic Games is the
International Olympic Committee (IOC). The IOCs principal role is
to lead the promotion of Olympism, in accordance with the Olympic
Charter.
The International Olympic Committee was established in 1894, with
Demetrius Vikelas as its first President, to organize the Olympic Games.
In a congress in Paris, held in 1894 it was decided that the first IOC
Olympic Games will take place in Athens in 1896. The International
Olympic Committee organizes the Olympic Games in collaboration with
several organizations and individuals. With the International Olympic
Committee at the helm of affairs, closely working with it are the
National Olympic Committees (NOCs), the International Federations (IFs)
of different sports, the International Olympic Academy (IOA) and the
National Olympic Academies (NOAs) apart from various individuals.
As the Olympics are allotted to a host city every four years, the
organization of the Olympic Games is entrusted by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) to the National Olympic Committee (NOC) of the
country of the host city as well as to the host city. The National
Olympic Committee in turn constitutes an Organizing Committee for the
Olympic Games (OCOG). For instance in the case of the 2008 Beijing
Olympic Games, the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the
XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) was established on December 13, 2001, five months
after Beijing won the right to host the 2008 Olympic Games.
The Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (OCOG), since the time
it is constituted, communicates directly with the International Olympic
Committee, whose guidelines and instructions it follows to organize the
Olympic Games. The Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games is a
holistic body and its executive body includes the International Olympic
Committee members in the country, the President and Secretary General of
the NOC and at least one member designated and represented by the host
city. The Organizing committee, usually for the better organizing and
functioning of the games includes representatives of the public
authorities and other leading figures from diverse fields. It is the
Organizing Committee that chooses and installs necessary infrastructure
for organizing the Games such as stadiums, Olympic Villages, training
halls and equipments for competing at the Games. It is also the OCOG
that arranges for medical services, lodging facilities, transportation
facilities for the athletes and officials. The OCOG is responsible for
holding cultural events at the opening and closing of the Olympic Games
as well as for writing the final report on the celebration of the Games
in two languages. The National Olympic Committees send there respective
athletes, whose entries have been accepted by the International Olympic
committee to the Olympic Games. The world athletes compete with each
other under the technical direction of the International Sports
Federations concerned. It is the International Olympic Committee that
has the final authority on any question concerning the Olympic Games.






