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Director of Communications of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Mark Adams speaks during a press conference in Kuala Lumpur yesterday, ahead of the 128th International Olympic Committee executive board meeting. Image Credit: AP

Kuala Lumpur: The International Olympic Committee executive board meetings have begun, setting the stage for Friday’s vote to decide which city will host the 2022 Winter Games.

The choice between Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan, is the centrepiece of the weeklong meetings in the Malaysian capital.

The executive board and later the full IOC membership will also receive status updates on preparations for next year’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, and the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

Rio has been beset by concerns over its polluted waterways, including the venues for the sailing and rowing events.

Tokyo last week scrapped the original design of a new Olympic main stadium because of soaring costs, which reached $2 billion (Dh7.34 billion). Construction was supposed to begin in October, but will now not begin until early next year.

The executive board was expected to consider, among other items on the agenda, whether to give recognition to South Sudan.

South Sudan, which split from Sudan and became independent in 2011, could be formally approved by the full IOC session beginning on Friday. It would become the 206th country — the latest after Kosovo — to gain Olympic recognition. This would allow South Sudan to send a team to Rio next year.

At the 2012 London Olympics, South Sudanese marathon runner Guor Marial competed as an independent athlete under the IOC flag.

On Friday, representatives from Almaty and Beijing will make final presentations to the IOC before the vote. If Beijing wins, the Chinese capital would become the first city to host both a Winter and Summer Games.

Also Friday, either Brasov, Romania, or Lausanne, Switzerland, will be chosen host city of the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics.

Local media, meanwhile, reported that the president of the Olympic Council of Malaysia, Prince Tunku Imran, said he had discussed with his Singaporean counterparts the possibility of the two countries submitting a joint bid for the 2028 or 2032 Olympics.