Olympic tix on sale

BEIJING, Oct 28, 2007 - Up to 1.85 million tickets for the 2008 Beijing Olympics will go on sale in China this week, organisers announced Sunday, six months after fans snapped up the first tranche of seats.
The release Tuesday of more tickets will give local fans a second chance to book a place at the August 8-24 Games.
China put 2.2 million tickets on offer for the home market in April and within a month more than a million had sold, with applications for key events massively oversubscribed and many sports fans disappointed.
Chinese residents will be allocated tickets on a ``first come, first serve basis,’’ the Beijing Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG) said on its website.
In an effort to curb ticket touting, BOCOG has implemented a system requiring buyers to register their personal identities, but already a black market has emerged, with prices soaring for some events.
Chinese fans are paying 25 times the official rate for tickets to see Liu Xiang, China’s 110m hurdles world champion, defend his Olympic title at the Games, state press reports said.
Ticket prices for other popular sports are also fetching up to 10 times face value.
Organisers said tickets for the opening and closing ceremonies sold out during the first phase of booking done through a computer lottery system that began on April 15.
A total of 1.59 million tickets were sold during the phase, with buyers largely interested in the opening and closing ceremonies and popular sports such as basketball, men’s football, diving and table tennis.
Seven million tickets will be sold for the 2008 games, with more than five million allocated to the host country.
Each person will be limited to 50 tickets, while sales for some events may be restricted to two purchases only, depending on their popularity.
Remaining tickets will be sold off from April next year.