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hyundai zimbabwe Post Review

Thank you @hyundaizimbabwe for giving me the opportunity to test drive and feel this beast. I am convinced am going to be a loyalist of the Hyundai brand. @Yvonne_Maphosa thank you for motivating me to dare and dream at the same time. https://t.co/WdTMIc85je

@Yvonne_Maphosa @Zimparks @Chimanimanitou1 @hyundaizimbabwe @ZtaUpdates Me after reading the word "soak" in caps https://t.co/HIBkuz2DpY

The team is now in Chiweshe courtesy of @hyundaizimbabwe and @bookingschipsh1 . Thank you @BrianJerahuni for the wheelchair .God is good! #Donatella received her wheelchair today! @StarfmZimbabwe @ndinonziyati https://t.co/GYGP8SvWwP

Listen, this is no ordinary car... @hyundaizimbabwe you’re doing it and doing it very well. I test drove the #SantaFe today and I’ll give it a perfect score. I would not change a thing save for the name on the car register to say - Nyasha Adler 💯 https://t.co/hu5gkMPp4S

Hyundai Zimbabwe unveils new Hyundai Palisade 2021 Hyundai has been searching for a three-row winner for a long time. The 2021 Hyundai Palisade is a strong contender in the midsize three-row crossover segment. See More : https://t.co/e4ct2hxVdo https://t.co/BmctYjFUST

Zambia's Satwant Singh is the driver that won the most African Rally Championship rounds From 1985 Zimbabwe Rally Challenge to 2002 Zambia International Rally, "Mukango" claimed 20 overall wins with differents brands such as Opel, Volkswagen, Toyota and Hyundai, Subaru. https://t.co/gjTasmJUu6

Thank you for the support… #FightingPeriodPoverty @Yvonne_Maphosa @MtcGirl @HannahSaliwe @hyundaizimbabwe https://t.co/2mLJjvk87N

We made it! #2kforGamu. Have a lovely birthday weekend @gamuchete you deserve it! @hyundaizimbabwe https://t.co/4w585dTKeG

The all new Hyundai Santa Fe now available in Zimbabwe! Contact @hyundaizimbabwe @admirendumo for a test drive and of course place your orders cdes takakohwa gore rino mari iripo! https://t.co/UIjEUSFQV2

My friends from @hyundaizimbabwe came through… Gifts & Surprises!!! https://t.co/rvwZIs0h1g

hyundai zimbabwe Q&A Review

What do Indians think about other countries?

U.S.A - Hollywood, Superpower, Hip Hop, Trump England - Lovely Accent, black cabs Australia - Sporting nation China - Electronics, Communism Russia - Friend, Putin Japan - High Tech, Honda, Yamaha, Bullet trains Germany - Automobiles, Albert Einstein South Korea - Samsung, Hyundai Italy - Museums, Ducati, Pizza, Rome France - Paris, Nepolian Spain - JLO, Ibiza, Real Madrid, Barcelona Portugal - Cristiano Ronaldo Argentina - Messi Philippines - M.B.B.S South Africa - Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi was disrespected in a train. Croatia - lost World cup final Greece - Mathematicians and Mythologies Zimbabwe - Plays Cricket Qatar - Qatar Airways Chile - Longest country Cuba - Cigars Jamaica - Usain Bolt, Chris Gayle Puerto Rico - Despacito Israel - Friend, Weapon seller, Advanced Tech Switzerland - Roger Federer, Amazing Climate Iceland - The Safest Netherlands - Electronic Dance Music Indonesia - Bali Maldives - Summer destination Cambodia - Temples Singapore - Highly developed Panama - Panama papers, Panama Canal Malta - Entropay Somalia - Pirates North Korea - Kim Jong Un, Nulcear weapons Egypt - Mummies, Pyramids, Nile river. Mexico - Drugs Columbia - Pablo Escobar Vatican City - The Smallest Romania - Hackerville Canada - Justin Bieber, Raccoons New Zealand - Rugby, Brendon McCullum Pakistan - Kashmir belongs to India Afghanistan - Friend, Rashid Khan, Taliban Sri Lanka - Lanka in Ramayana

What was life like in 2000 compared to 2017?

Life was way too different in the year 2000 compared to 2018. 2017 is a passe now. This will be a ,really really long list,, but I’m pretty sure people who will read this will be nostalgic about the good times of the bygone era. Here you go: Let’s get the obvious one out of the way. ,Y2K, apocalypse was a huge thing in the late 1999. It soon became a myth after January 1st 2000. This year was one of the last times ,7th Standard, had a board exam apart from 10th and 12th standard. Cyber Cafes, were temples for us kids where we had to wait in line or get tokens to play WWF Raw is War, Counter Strike, Hercules, Alladin, Brian Lara 99 or EA Cricket 2000. TV Video games, were still a huge thing and we had the chance to show off some cassettes like 7-in-1, 4-in-1 or 3-in-1 having the best games. Desktop computers were slowly making their presence felt in our homes with 64MB RAM and 4GB hard disk. Mac’s were non-existent. Yahoo, Satyam and Rediff were popular websites for Indians back then. Social Media, memes, trolls was not even conceptualized at that time. Indian cricket team were also-rans until ,match fixing controversy, hit us in March 2000 which ended the careers of Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja, after which Sourav Ganguly took over the captaincy and the rest is history. Cricket tournaments at ,Sharjah, were dying a slow death due to the above point. Indian team never played there after 2000. Australia emerged as world beaters in this year in cricket with players like ,Brett Lee and Adam Gilchrist, announcing their arrival. Zimbabwe was still a competitive team. T20’s didn’t even exist. Test and ODI’s were taken seriously and cricket was not commercialized back then. Hrithik-Mania, had hit us in the year 2000 with every kid trying to imitate him from Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai. Boost and Milo, were popular energy drinks and we used to get cricket goodies such as bats, ball, cricket books, cricket flicker books and tote bags for free. If you are a NRI from the, US or Middle East,, you were given VIP treatment whenever you visited India. Also US was literally the land of opportunities in those days. Letters and Telegrams, evoked emotions. I was always looking forward for the postman’s visit anticipating letters from uncles or cousins. STD/ISD had cheaper rates in the night. Greetings during birthdays, anniversaries or promotion at work always made you happy unlike a Facebook or a Whatsapp message today. Milk was cheap back then for just 10 rupees. Pepsi and Coca Cola, were not really considered to be unhealthy drinks unlike today. Diet, Gym and Protein shakes were ,alien words, back then. Playing outdoors, cycle rides and running determined your fitness. Nobody stopped us from eating loads of Panipuris, Puffs or samosas which were available for ₹5. Items like Tacos, lasagnas, burritos were non-existent and softy ice-creams were the thing. There was only a single mall in a city unlike a minimum of 3–4 malls today and buying any items from there made us happy. Having a ,Pilot pen, Parker pen or Hero pen, which were purchased paying around ₹50-₹100, or which were gifted by relatives swelled our pride at school. Tuition or coaching classes, used to take place at a house or a small building unlike very huge centers. I remember paying only ₹200/month for these classes unlike ₹1000 for 12th std for ₹5000 for an IIT package. We kids were still finding joy playing cricket, hide and seek and many other games in our apartment oblivious of the future. We used to hang out with each other and they were our ,“real” friends, apart from friends at school or college. Apartment romances among teenagers and grown ups were quite cool and most of them have ended in successful marriages. Sadly that good old apartment life of the 90’s and early 2000’s is missing today. Kitty Parties ,were still a thing in apartments among aunties, unlike today where you barely know your neighbor next door. Sundays used to be fun back then with doing productive work such as reading books, house parties or completing pending work. Going out for lunch or dinner with family or relatives always made us happy. Cordless phones, were the next big thing and only very few people had the privilege of owning mobile phones. Pagers were still a thing. Smartphones were yet to be conceived. Kodak and Yashica cameras, were in and there were no digital albums unlike today. Handycams were considered a big deal for video recording. (sigh, never got a chance to own a handycam) Boomer and Big Babol, were the cool chewing gums with freebies such as Tattoos and comics. ,Big Fun, was popular for Cricket trading cards. Bollywood movies had more soul and were fun to watch. Nobody knew the word ,nepotism, back then. Kaun Banega Crorepati, gave a GK class for an entire nation and it helped Amitabh Bachchan revive his career in Bollywood. Doordarshan, still had quality content on TV with Chitrahaar, Rangoli, Shaktimaan, Om Namah Shivay, Disney Time etc and it was our stressbusters. Reality TV shows such as ,Boogie Woogie and Sa Re Ga Ma, were real and intense unlike scripted shows like Roadies, Splitsvilla and Big Boss. Cartoon Network, MTV and Channel V, was the only source of entertainment for us kids, with cartoon and music shows in both English and Hindi enthralling us. Comics such as ,Amar Chitra Katha, Hitopadesha, Chacha Choudhary, Billu, Nagraj, Super Commando Dhruv, Parmanu, regalled us with new stories each time and gave us life lessons. This was the year Ekta Kapoor screwed the quality of TV serials with ,Saas-Bahu sagas ,which had the entire nation glued to it. DD News, Aaj Tak and NDTV were the only Indian news channels in those days. NDTV provided quality news unlike crassy and fake news today. DD’s news for, visually impaired and Sanskrit edition, always kept me hooked. Kannada matinee idol ,Rajkumar, was kidnapped in this year by forest brigand Veerappan, who had still instilled fear. He was released after a few months. Hyundai Santro, Maruti 800 and Daewoo Matiz were the popular cars. Maruti Omni and Mahindra Bolero were the popular SUV’s. Hero Honda Splendor, Suzuki Samurai, TVS Victor were the popular bikes. Computer Science, IIT, IIM, GATE, MS in foreign countries were considered to be a really big deal. Also not every ,E&C, Civil or Mechanical engineers, found himself in a software company after graduating. Lara Dutta (Miss Universe), Priyanka Chopra (Miss World) and Dia Mirza (Miss Asia Pacific), brought laurels to India in World Beauty contests. Bangalore was still the ,Garden City, we all knew and this was also the year when the software boom started hitting the high notes. Traveling on flights were a luxury in early 2000’s. Train and bus journeys were fun. Cancer, Diabetes, Dengue… these were considered rare diseases back then. Politics were not as dirty as today and terrorism was still an unfamiliar term. Love marriages and ,divorce, were considered to be a sin. Chattisgarh, Jharkand and Uttaranchal states were created. Windows 2000 was released with huge fanfare, but still Windows 98 was more preferred. This was the year ,USB thumb drive, was created, with the earliest size being 8MB. CD’s, Typewriters and floppy drives, were still the thing in 2000’s. MP3’s ,were yet to be conceived. Cassettes, Walkmans and Tape Recorders were a huge deal, with each cassette costing around ₹30-₹50 Computer coaching classes taught you MS-DOS and basic HTML. We used to see ,clear, skies and stars were visible. AT LAST, people were more nice, kind and cordial towards each other and had time for everything. They lived a “life” instead of superficial life. Hope you liked this extremely lengthy list. People knew the importance of having a genuine conversation with each other rather than texting a conversation. Any thoughts on this would be highly appreciated.

What countries used to be weak but are now powerful?

There seems to be quite a few answers regarding this country already but I must add to their explanations by giving a historic approach as an IGCSE history student. South Korea. Believe it or not South Korea used to be in poverty, to the point famine was becoming an alarming issue. Countries like Zimbabwe was better in terms of human development, and this was due to the fact that the country had undergone Japan's occupation and the Korean civil war. (South Korea was originally poorer in general and less industrialized before the rule of Japan) For more information on the Korean war or the country under Japan's rule you should go check out some history articles online. The rule of Japan ended as the atomic bombing of Japan marked the end of the second world war. This was in 1945. Korea was divided into two. The North was to be supervised and advised by the Soviet Union, while the South was to be advised by the US. At this stage South Korea was the weaker district in terms of economy. The bombings South Korea after a double blow Then Park Jeong Hui started a Coup d'état and became president by force. He began backing up the leading companies in South Korea and started to get loans for those corporations just so that they could grow. Some of those include Samsung, a multinational conglomerate that still lives to this date and is the industry leader for the industry of mobile phones. Other examples include LG, Lotte or Hyundai, all of which are multinational companies that still exist. Park Jeong Hui Not just that, he introduced low taxes for all businesses in general. He even discarded all barriers in terms of international trade. This can be compared to Korea in its early Joseon dynasty, when there was virtually no interactions with the west and the king ruled for as long as he lived. Corporations at this time took advantage of the large workforce available in South Korea at that time. They focused on manufacturing goods. Then as they grew further with the support of the state, they started expanding into the Hi-Tech industry. This is quite a recent example, but if you know quite a few things about mobile technology you should know that OLED displays are the best type of display there is in smartphones nowadays and they were first adopted by LG. Sony, the Japanese company you're thinking about, yup that's the one, attempted to commercialize OLED screens, but they simply disregarded / didn't think of the possibility of smaller mobile phone displays and ditched the idea because they were too expensive to manufacture when produced as larger displays. The Galaxy S series all have AMOLED displays, a variant of OLED. LG saw this as an opportunity and started manufacturing OLED displays for mobile phones. Soon they were experienced enough to produce large OLED TVs with efficiency and less money invested. The countries got large enough to start competing with other multinational corporations from abroad, and a lot of businesses started exporting overseas on a massive scale. This is also known as Miracle on the Han River, which simply refers to the miracle of face-paced economic growth in South Korea after the Korean war. The term is named after the Miracle on the Rhine from West Germany, when it recovered fast after the second world war. Read this article on the Miracle on the Han River for more. ,Miracle on the Han River - Wikipedia, Now all they needed was a wider selection of high skilled workforce for its industries. South Korea's government knew education was the obvious key to ensuring the safety of these 'Chaebols,' the biggest corporations in South Korea. They started focusing on education from every aspect and that is how we get some of the top marks in international competitions globally today. I don't want to get into too much detail on education, but we South Koreans have the highest suicide rate for children in the world. This is, of course, a bad thing, but I'm including it because it's mostly because of the stressful educational pressure they get from the high expectations of their parents and hakwons. (tuition centers) Now South Korea is one of the wealthiest countries in the world. Here are some statistics - 17th on the Human Development Index, 2016. 11th in terms of GDP. I would like to conclude by saying that we were very hard working. Except for the new millennials, myself included. Thanks for reading, hope this answer helped, and feel free to ask more questions about this.

How many countries can you name by memory?

Hi Everyone! I'm not much proud of my memorizing Skills but there was a Time I loved World Geography. I used to Memorize the Capitals, Currencies and Other Informations Just for my Childish curiosity. So let me recall it from the Nostalgic Golden Days Enjoy the World Tour from the eye of a 5th Grader and Look what he thinks about every Single Country. Let's Start.. The most Liked and Loved by me, Pakistan (My Home Country <3) Saudi Arabia (Sacred Land) Iran (Standing Tall) Iraq (Wounded Warrior) Turkey (Prominent Muslim Country) South Africa (The Gold Mine) Denmark (Cronas) Norway (Gentleman) UK (A Country Headed by a Nanny) USA (So Called Super Power) China (The Economist) Russia (Gone Past) Afghanistan (Graveyard of Superpowers) Syria (Running Blood? India (Great People Led by Illiterate Politicians) Finland (Nokia HQ) Netherlands (Country of Akram Khan) Italy (Pizza) Sweden Switzerland (Watches) Canada (The Generous Country) UAE (Mini Europe) Kuwait (Highest Currency Value) Qatar (Oil and Gas) France (Paris and Fragrance) Croatia (FIFA World Cup Finalists) Hungary (Actually Not Hungry) Uganda Nigeria (FGM and Infibulation) Mali Tanzania (Forests) Zimbabwe (Bankrupt Cricket Board) Brazil (The Football Champions) Sudan (Tribes) Libya (Moammar Qaddafi) Israel (An Ant the Elephant's Trunk) Germany (World Class Cars) Japan (The land of Rising Sun) Egypt (Great Pyramids) Thailand (Prostitution) Singapore (Businessman City) Malaysia (Petronas Twin Towers) Indonesia (Islands in an Order) Somalia (Under Privileged Country) North Korea (The Rebel) South Korea ( Samsung and Hyundai) Yemen (Thieves of Faith) Hope you Enjoyed, I'll keep adding more. Love from ,Mi :)

Why can't government just print more money to pay back its debt to other countries?

Very common but an intelligent question to ask !! See essentially money is a relative concept .. have this thing very clear in your mind. one rupee meant a lot 100 years ago today it does not mean much .. So coming back to ur question about printing money If you print money or notes keeping all other parameters determining nations wealth ( gold reserves , agricultural output , industrial output , minerals etc ) constant in other words demand remains the same and there is an excess supply of money in the hands of the people so naturally applying DSP here prices r bound to rise Lemme give a hypothetical example . But talking about the advantages of doing so We will be having a higher gdp nominal ranking (currently 7th due to low inflation in India ) we might 3–4.positions up We will be able to import more and our imports will incre. Disadvantages Foreign companies like accenture Suzuki Hyundai who have their production plants in India because of the availability of cheap Labour will stop having so because of high prices and people demanding for more salary in turn increasing the production cost . Some people have a constant income source irrespective of the shape of the economy ( eg . Retired clerks/officers who rely on the interest provided by the bank on their bank balance as a source of income ) so if inflation rises .. their income remains the same but due to the high prices outside they will suffer Value of rupee will fall significantly .. To further add to this I would Like to highlight some instances when foreign governments commited this folly of trying to pay off their debts by printing more money 1-Zimbabwe ( someone mentioned this in one of the above answers 2- Germany ( after loosing WW1 the allied powers imposed heavy reparations on Germany , in order to pay off the debts German govt printed a pleothra of notes resulting in nothing but HIGH HIGH Inflation and lot of people not able to afford the high prices of essential commodities dying of starvation And poverty .

What will be the outcome of a country which large number of people becomes CEO's and companies owners, Interms of development and government revenues etc?

I guess your question is “What is the outcome of a country ,with ,a large number of people becom,ing ,CEOs and company owners, in terms of development and government revenues, etc? Above is the question, right? And above it,, after correcting the typing mistakes, I see you included ,developing countries ,among the topics your question can fall. What developing countries lack, and can it lead to development and a sea of revenues? Can becoming CEOs and company owners solve that? How revenues are collected in the developing world? ,Africa has the highest corporate tax in the word, averaging at 28% annually (and this is 9% more than the Europe’s); BRICS 27.4%; S. America 27.5%., ,Revenue collection systems are sometimes not efficient, as transparency lack, ,The South African Revenue Services was one to praise, but things turned the opposite way., ,That being said, the question is: Are more companies more revenues without a proper revenue collection? Because there are stories of small companies filling the gap even in construction, and there was a growth in turnover even tough times., Formalisation Developing countries are the least formalised on the planet and the government can’t tax easily the informal segment of the nation’s business. It may not be safe to argue that Zimbabwe’s fast decline (and the more than 56% decline in collectible annual revenues) which started in the late 1990s straight to late 2008 was all because of much of her business going informal. In fact, business had to go informal after company closures, and again, company closures had erased more than half of the CEOs and managers by 2008, a year when business in Zimbabwe was no longer practical. All day, we may argue. The true thing is CEO-ship and company-culture-ship can bring in formalisation. My lessons from Zimbabwe are that, the formal business folks are the most vocal. They can be involved in the background in the process of altering the legal structure so that they can be favourable to their business and even anyone’s business or not. The informal segment can not change anything. Legal structures can only remain terribly bad or unfavourable if it remains the bigger sector of the economy. The informal sector is: not easier to tax not easier to subsidise not easier to fund with loans that must be returned can not be easily detected by the radar of the law if it engages in criminal activity (like even digital piracy) not friendly to partnerships between players. I mean, how can an artist safely linkup with a programmer to develop a million-dollar game… which gets us to another aspect, in case an investor is needed far away from systems of growth like the stock exchange system. After a coup, South Korea’s president Park started a massive industrialisation programme. His approach at first was to let the ordinary people grow through loans, educating them, etc., and finally end up in construction industries, etc. But he had no choice. So, he had to invite Samsung’s founder who had been exiles by the previous regime. Park was surely successful with the new team he lined up. These guys (Samsung starting point in 1938 is $25) had experience in business. So, the company/conglomerate/chaebol model worked for him and it remained intact after his assassination. Samsung is now a big company, and other players lined up for Park’s plan in the 1960s (Hyundai, etc.) Regionalisation or de-regionalisation My bad but Italy before the WWII is a good example, and I am so sure it’s not a bad thing to consider her “developing” during that phase of history. The rise of Italian CEOs and companies followed years after the unification, and they were distributed in Northern Italy. The more they increased, the more Italy became more geographical unequal. Up today Southern Italy is the poorer Italy. It’s even pooered than some parts of Poland. Business operate under this: ,Money is a place. So, people with ideas and CEO candidates tend to follow money wherever it is. Kentucky can only be poorer America while New York is the crazy rich America. What being said here is the rise of companies can promote regionalisation of wealth than reverse it. It’s true however that the Northern parts of Ital were better off than the Southern ones since centuries ago. ,Really? ,Demography can also play a part. But such regionalisation of wealth does not tend to affect the revenue collection process negatively. In fact, it aids it. Gender and income More women in boardrooms, is what’s apparent in countries with highest shares of CEOs. This tends to increase ,her ,share of earnings in percentage terms. Again, things are not always so. The increase in her share of income earnings is as a result of more and more of her rights gained. She also has industries specific to her which she can now enter and perform in sports, arts, designing, etc., be all the talent involved in the business there without becoming a CEO and owning a company. A gymnast can still be trained by a male coach (you get the point) at a school established by a guy. The rise of other industries (apart from agriculture, mining and manufacturing/processing). DIVERSIFICATION and more revenues collectible. A lot of censorship happening in African countries may be caused by many reasons including regimes trying to cover themselves up. But it may be due to the fact that the media, filming, etc., industries are not regarded as industries. We learned about multinationals in the three conventional industries ,manufacturing/mining/agric ,but our schools are not ready to teach us about, you know, Disney/Marvels putting forward $356 millions in the production of the End Game. As more and more boardrooms come to life, pressure and competition results in aspiring company owners to look for other industries. Secularisation. Nations with the highest number of CEO tends to be secular. Arguing that way is, however, not ideal. But I am so sure prayers are not for the boardrooms. And once boardrooms are numerous in numbers systems can also copy their model or be lured into copying. Nations do need to be secular to develop. In my country, for example, if anything like Only Fans (an online platform for donations and tipping) arises, the following day it will be banned. Religious reasons will be given. “Oh pornstars are using it!” Secularisation may be triggered by the influx in numbers of the female players in boardrooms. Yah, female CEOs. In fact, companies owned by females are more influential in softening rigid gender mentalities. Go to Saudi Arabia. Dependency load, there, is high due to the fact that less than 22% of working-age-woman are employed, the rest are depending upon their male counterparts, and hence the higher dependency load. In Japan, a higher dependency load is due to the 25.9% of the population are 65 and older, ,. Shoartages in workforce are hitting both. Both must import their workforce. In the case of S.A. guy from Britain can fly in. Others are from Jordan. Saudi Arabia is an oil giant. If more companies in other industries spring up, which is less likely, labour imports can cease to be worth the pain they cause and leader to the utilisation of the untapped females. Changes in land use models and “land revenues” In Kenya the legal framework concerning land is now geared towards formalisation, ,. Is it driven by a “company culture”? Ivory Coast failed and it’s more than twenty years now. Formalisation in areas relating to land use can help if there are functional economic model and plans to back them. Combined formalisation and models can lead to growth, and growth to more revenues. Variety in the job sector. Competition in production and selling of good. When more capable companies rise, the job sector will be safe place for school leavers. Salaries rise. A retrenchment will decrease, and when they happen they don’t happen to cause any mass panic. Fifty shoe makers in one country means fifty shoes and fifty prices to choose from. This is a benefit to the consumer. Industries are also left with no choice but to accept the services of the other. A shoe manufacturer can look sideways and sign a contract with an automated machine manufacturer— ,oh, machines please, retailing giants are waiting and I will put their names in the current batch; plus I am hired to design shoes and leather clothing for ABZ films. More companies→More Competition→The urge to look for outside markets→Foreign trade and forex (growth of the national economy at home)→ Still more competition→ Winners keeps doing business growing large, losers perish. Agriculture Agriculture in the hands of commercial companies can only become more and more of a large/superscale project. Labour costs increases as higher wages became a thing to attract workers who increasingly find other industries with fixed jobs attracting. As labour costs rises, machinery and more innovation enters the game. Higher profits and higher costs are involved. Higher profits can translate to revenues that can be collected. Higher costs are revenues for other companies and retailers. Concluding remarks Company business is the zenith of any business of the planet, and from any business on planet earth governments and systems tax. It would be a benefit for a developing country to have an influx of company owners. A brutal tax regime in developing countries can allow governments to end up reaping much revenues. In some cases we companies tend to be involved in bribing and corruption, and if they build connecting relationship before trade unions get strong enough to fight it the worker can suffer. But these sloppy-sides are far outweighed by the benefits. Note,: I really love to answer question free on quora. You can donate to my patreon ,account ,(I am sorry to say this).

What major sport tournaments are suspended across the world due to coronavirus pandemics?

Here is the list…… ISISSF International Solidarity Championships in Dhaka, Bangladesh from Feb. 22-28 postponed. World Cup in Shanghai from May 4-10 canceled. ATHLETICS World indoor championships in Nanjing from March 13-15 postponed to March 2021. World half marathon championships in Gdynia, Poland on March 29 postponed to Oct. 17. Hong Kong Marathon on Feb. 9 canceled. Asian indoor championships in Hangzhou from Feb. 12-13 canceled. Asian cross-country championships in Hong Kong on March 29 postponed. Tokyo Marathon on March 1, restricted to elite runners. Paris Half Marathon on March 1 postponed to Sept. 6. Nagoya Women's Marathon on March 8, restricted to elite runners. Rome Half Marathon on March 8 canceled. New Taipei City Marathon in Taiwan on March 15 canceled. Suzhou Half Marathon in China on March 15 canceled. Barcelona Marathon on March 15 postponed to Oct. 25. New York Half Marathon on March 15 canceled. Seoul Marathon on March 22 canceled. Chongqing International Marathon in China on March 22 canceled. Wuxi Marathon in China on March 22 canceled. Mersin Marathon in Turkey on March 22 postponed. Lisbon Half Marathon on March 22 postponed to Sept. 6. Rome Marathon on March 29 canceled. Madrid Half Marathon on March 29 postponed. Paris Marathon on April 5 postponed to Oct. 18. Milan Marathon in Italy on April 5 postponed. Daegu International Marathon in South Korea on April 5 canceled. Kyiv Half Marathon in Ukraine on April 5 postponed. Wuhan Marathon in China on April 12 canceled. Pyongyang Marathon in North Korea on April 12 canceled. Yangzhou Jianzhen International Half Marathon in China on April 12 postponed. Vienna City Marathon on April 19 canceled. Hamburg Marathon on April 19 postponed. Dongying International Marathon in China on April 26 canceled.AUTO RACING Formula One: Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on March 15: McLaren team withdrew. Formula One: Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir on March 22, no spectators. Formula One: Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai on April 19 postponed. Formula E: Sanya E-Prix in Japan on March 21 canceled. Formula E: Rome E-Prix on April 4 postponed. Formula E: Jakarta E-Prix on June 6 canceled.BADMINTON China Masters in Hainan from Feb. 25-March 1 postponed. Asian team championships in Manila from Feb. 11-16: China and Hong Kong withdrew. German Open in Mulheim from March 3-8 canceled. Portuguese International Championships in Caldas da Rainha from March 5-8 canceled. Polish Open in Krakow from March 26-29 postponed. Vietnam International Challenge in Hanoi postponed from March 24-29 to June 2-7. Asia championships moved from Wuhan, China to Manila on April 21-26.BASEBALL MLB: Spring training remaining games canceled; season delayed by two weeks. Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan: Preseason from Feb. 26-March 15, no spectators. Regular season due to start on March 20, postponed. KBO League in South Korea: Preseason from March 14-24 canceled. Regular season due to start on March 28, postponed. Olympic qualifying tournament in Taichung and Dou Liu, Taiwan moved from April 1-5 to June 17-21.BASKETBALL NBA from March 11 suspended. FIBA competitions from March 13 suspended. Women's Olympic qualifying tournament moved from Foshan, China, to Belgrade, Serbia, from Feb. 6-9. 3x3 Olympic qualifying tournament in Bengaluru, India from March 18-22 postponed. Asia Cup qualifiers postponed: Philippines vs. Thailand on Feb. 20; Japan vs. China on Feb. 21; China vs. Malaysia on Feb. 24. Matches scheduled for Hong Kong moved to opponents' homes. NCAA tournaments in United States cancel NCAA tournament. South Korean Basketball League: All games from Feb. 25, no spectators. From Feb. 29, suspended. Serie A in Italy: Games on March 7, no spectators. From March 8-13, postponed. EuroLeague: Milan vs. Real Madrid in Milan on March 3; Valencia vs. Milan in Valencia on March 5. Competition from March 12 suspended. EuroLeague Women: Famila Schio vs. Sopron on Feb. 26; Reyer vs. Riga on Feb. 26; USK Praha vs. Famila Schio on March 11; Ekaterinburg vs. Montpellier on March 11, canceled. Competition from March 13 suspended. EuroCup: Brescia vs. Reyer on March 3, Monaco vs. UNICS Kazan on March 4, Darussafaka vs. Bologna on March 5, no spectators. Competition from March 12 suspended. EuroCup Women: Castors Braine vs. Valencia on March 12; Reyer vs. Girona on March 12, canceled. Dynamo Kursk vs. Avenida on March 12 canceled. Competition from March 13 suspended. 3x3 Asia Cup in Changsa, China from March 13-17 postponed to Sept. 9-13. Basketball Africa League due to start on March 13 delayed.BIATHLON Olympic test event in Zhangjiakou, China from Feb. 27-March 2 canceled. World Cup in Nove Mesto, Czech Republic from March 5-8, no spectators.BOXING Asia-Oceania Olympic qualifier moved from Wuhan, China, to Amman, Jordan, from March 3-11. Americas Olympic qualifier in Buenos Aires, Argentina from March 26-April 3 suspended.CANOE-KAYAK Asian canoe slalom championships in Pattaya, Thailand on March 22 postponed to April. Asian Olympic canoe sprint qualifying tournament in Pattaya, Thailand on March 26 postponed to April.SPORT CLIMBING Asian Championships in Chongqing, China from April 25-May 3 to be relocated. Olympic test event in Tokyo on March 6, no athletes and spectators. World Cup in Wujiang, China from April 18-19 canceled. World Cup in Chongqing, China on April 22 canceled.CRICKET Indian Premier League, due to start on March 29, deferred until April 15. India v South Africa ODI series, started on March 12, called off after first ODI was washed out England tour of Sri Lanka, scheduled to start on March 19, postponed. MCC v Essex game (March 24 to 27) and World Cricket Committee meeting cancelled Men's Cricket World Cup Challenge League A between Canada, Denmark, Malaysia, Qatar, Singapore and Vanuatu in Malaysia from March 16-26 postponed. Everest Premier League in Nepal, due to start on March 14, postponed. Women's ODI Quadrangular between Thailand, Ireland, Netherlands and Zimbabwe in Chiang Mai, Thailand from April 3-11 canceled.CYCLING Tour of Hainan in China from Feb. 23-March 1 postponed. UAE Tour cancelled on Feb. 27 after 5 of 7 stages. Strade Bianche in Siena, Italy on March 7 canceled. Paris-Nice from March 8-15: Mitchelton-Scott, Ineos, Astana, UAE Team Emirates, CCC, Movistar, Jumbo-Visma teams withdrew. From Stage 2 of 8, no spectators. GP Larciano in Pistoia, Italy on March 8 canceled. Tirreno-Adriatico in Italy from March 11-17 canceled. Ronde van Drenthe (women) in the Netherlands on March 15: Mitchelton-Scott, Movistar, Rally Cycling teams withdrew. Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal from March 18-22 canceled. Milan-San Remo on March 21 canceled. Mountain Bike World Cup in Lousa, Portugal on March 21-22 canceled. Trofeo Alfredo Binda (women) in Cittiglio, Italy on March 22 postponed to June 2. Tour de Normandie in France from March 23-27 canceled. Volta a Catalunya in Spain from March 23-29, no spectators. Settimana Coppi e Bartali in Italy from March 25-29 canceled. Giro di Sicilia in Italy from April 1-4 canceled. Tour of Chongming Island (women) in China from May 7-9 postponed. Tour of Zhoushan Island in China from May 12-14 postponed. Tour of Taiyuan in China on May 31 postponed. Sea Otter Classic in Monterey, California from Oct. 1-4 postponed.EQUESTRIAN Hong Kong showjumping leg of Longines Masters Series from Feb. 14-16 canceled.FENCING Anaheim Grand Prix in California on March 13-15 postponed. Men's Saber World Cup in Budapest, Hungary on March 20-22 postponed. Men's Epee World Cup in Buenos Aires, Argentina on March 20-22 postponed. Sint-Niklaas Women's Saber World Cup: March 20-22 Tashkent Women's Epee World Cup: March 20-22 Junior and Cadet World Championships (Salt Lake City, Utah): April 3-11 African Zonal Olympic Qualifier (Cairo, Egypt): April 15 Asian Zonal Olympic Qualifier (Seoul, Korea), April 15-16 European Zonal Olympic Qualifier (Madrid, Spain), April 18-19 American Zonal Olympic Qualifier (Panama City, Panama), April 18-19FIELD HOCKEY Hockey Pro League women's matches between China and Belgium on Feb. 8-9 and Australia on March 14-15 postponed. Australia's Hockey Pro League matches in Spain, Germany and Netherlands from March 14-29 postponed. New Zealand's Hockey Pro League matches in Germany on March 19 and the Netherlands on March 29 postponed. India women's tour of China from March 14-25 canceled. Ireland women's tour of Malaysia in March-April canceled.GOLF US LPGA Tour Honda LPGA Thailand in Pattaya from Feb. 20-23 canceled. HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore from Feb. 27-March 1 canceled. Blue Bay LPGA on Hainan Island from March 5-8 canceled. European Tour Kenya Open in Nairobi from March 12-15 canceled. Indian Open in New Delhi from March 19-22 postponed. Maybank Championship in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from April 16-19 postponed. China Open in Shenzhen from April 23-26 postponed. Czech Masters in Prague on Aug. 20-23 canceled. Japan LPGA Tour Daikin Orchid Ladies in Okinawa from March 5-8 canceled. Meiji Yasuda Life Women's Yokohama Tire Tournament in Konan from March 13-15 canceled. Asia Tour Royal Cup in Pattaya, Thailand from March 12-15 postponed.GYMNASTICS Artistic World Cup in Melbourne, Australia, from Feb. 20-23: China team withdrew. All-Around World Cup in Milwaukee on March 7: Russia team withdrew. Artistic World Cup in Doha, Qatar on March 18-21 postponed to June 3-6. All-Around World Cup in Stuttgart, Germany on March 20-22 canceled. Rhythmic World Cup in Pesaro, Italy on April 3-5 postponed to June 5-7. All-Around World Cup in Tokyo on April 4-5: Russia team withdrew. Artistic Jesolo Cup in Italy on April 4-5 canceled. Trampoline World Cup in Brescia, Italy on April 24-25 postponed to June 19-20.HANDBALL Olympic women's qualifying tournament in Montenegro from March 20-22: China withdrew. Hong Kong declined invitation to attend.HORSE RACING Japan Racing Association: All races from Feb. 27 to have no spectators.ICE HOCKEY NHL: Suspending play immediately Women's world championship in Nova Scotia, Canada from March 31-April 10 canceled. Women's world championship Division I Group A in Angers, France from April 12-18 canceled. Women's world championship Division I Group B in Katowice, Poland from March 28-April 3 canceled. Women's world championship Division II Group A in Jaca, Spain from March 29-April 3 canceled. Men's world championship Division IV in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan from May 3-5 canceled. NCAA Division 1 men's championship in the United States from March 11, no spectators. Women's Challenge Cup of Asia in Manila, Philippines from Feb. 23-28 canceled. Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I in Manila, Philippines from Feb. 23-28 canceled. National League and Swiss League in Switzerland suspended from March 2-15.v Chinese clubs in Supreme Hockey League playing home games in Russia. US-Based Professional Women's Hockey Players Association tour of Japan from March 4-7 canceled.JUDO Paris Grand Slam on Feb. 8-9: China team withdrew. Dusseldorf Grand Slam in Germany on Feb. 21-23: China team withdrew. Rabat Grand Prix in Morocco on March 6-8 canceled. Swiss Open in Winterthur on March 7-8 canceled. Ekaterinburg Grand Slam in Russia on March 13-15 canceled. Santiago Panamerican Open in Chile from March 14-15 canceled. Lima Panamerican Open in Peru from March 21-22 canceled. Tbilisi Grand Prix in Georgia from March 27-29 canceled. Antalya Grand Prix in Turkey from April 3-5 canceled.MODERN PENTATHLON World championships moved from Xiamen to Cancun, Mexico, from May 25-31. World laser run championships moved from Xiamen in May to Weiden, Germany, in August.MOTORCYCLING MotoGP Qatar Grand Prix in Doha on March 8 canceled. Thailand Grand Prix in Buriram on March 22 postponed to Oct. 4. Aragon Grand Prix in Spain moved from Oct. 4 to Sept. 27. Americas Grand Prix in Austin, Texas on April 5 postponed to Nov. 15. Argentina Grand Prix in Termas de Rio Hondo on April 19 postponed to Nov. 22. Valencia Grand Prix in Spain on Nov. 15 moved to Nov. 29. World Superbikes Qatar Round in Lusail on March 15 postponed. Spanish Round in Cadiz on March 29 postponed to Oct. 25. French Round in Magny-Cours on Sept. 27 postponed to Oct. 4.ROWING World Cup I in Sabuadia, Italy from April 10-12 canceled. Asia and Oceania Olympic qualifying regatta in Chungju, South Korea from April 27-30 canceled. European Olympic qualifying regatta in Varese, Italy from April 27-29 canceled. World Cup II in Varese, Italy from May 1-3 canceled.RUGBY LEAGUE Super League: Catalans vs. Leeds in Perpignan on March 14, no spectators.RUGBY UNION Six Nations: Ireland vs. Italy in Dublin on March 7; Italy vs. England in Rome on March 14; France vs. Ireland in Paris on March 14, postponed. Women's Six Nations: Italy vs. Scotland in Legnano on Feb. 23; Scotland vs. France in Glasgow on March 7; Ireland vs. Italy in Dublin on March 8; Italy vs. England in Padua on March 15; Wales vs. Scotland in Cardiff on March 15; France vs. Ireland in Villeneuve-d'Ascq on March 15, postponed. Pro14: Zebre vs. Ospreys on Feb. 29; Treviso vs. Ulster on Feb. 29; Cardiff vs. Zebre on March 21; Treviso vs. Munster on March 21; Munster vs. Treviso on March 27; Zebre vs. Connacht on March 27, postponed. Super Rugby: Sunwolves vs. ACT Brumbies on March 8 moved from Osaka, Japan to Canberra, Australia. Sunwolves vs. Crusaders on March 14 moved from Tokyo to Brisbane, Australia. Japan's Top League: Round 7 on Feb. 29-March 1 and Round 8 on March 7-8 postponed. All matches suspended from March 14-31. Hong Kong Sevens moved from April 3-5 to Oct. 16-18. Singapore Sevens moved from April 11-12 to Oct. 10-11. Asia women's championship in Hong Kong moved from March 14-22 to May 8-16. Olympic test event (Asia Sevens Invitational) in Tokyo from April 25-26 canceled.SAILING Clipper Round the World Race moved sixth leg stopover in Qingdao, China to Subic Bay, Philippines from March 11-21. Asian Nacra 17 Championship in Shanghai from March 1-6 moved to Genoa, Italy, from April 12-19. Asian 49erFX Championship in Hainan, China from March 20-29 moved to Genoa, Italy, from April 12-19.SHOOTING World Cup in New Delhi from March 15-26 postponed to May 5-12 and June 2-9. Olympic test event in Tokyo from April 16-26 canceled.SKATING Short track speed skating world championships in Seoul from March 13-15 postponed. Figure skating world championships in Montreal from March 16-22 canceled.SKIING Alpine World Cup Finals in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy from March 18-22 canceled. Alpine World Cup in Yanqing, China from Feb. 15-16 canceled. Nordic World Cup in Oslo, Norway from March 6-8, no spectators. Engadin Skimarathon in Switzerland on March 8 canceled. Snowboard World Cup in Livigno, Italy on March 10 canceled. Ski Jumping World Cup in Trondheim, Norway on March 11-12, no spectators. Alpine World Cup in Are, Sweden on March 12-14, canceled. Ski Jumping World Cup in Nizhny Tagil, Russia on March 13-15, no spectators. Ski Jumping World Cup in Vikersund, Norway on March 13-15, no spectators. Snowboard World Cup in Winterberg, Germany on March 14-15 canceled. Alpine World Cup in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia from March 14-15, canceled. Alpine Europa Cup Finals in Saalbach and Reiteralm, Austria from March 16-22 canceled. World ski flying championships in Planica, Slovenia from March 17-22, no spectators. Ski jumping World Cup in Chaikovsky, Russia on March 18-20, no spectators. Junior ski cross and snowboard cross world championships in Saint-Lary, France from March 19-25 canceled. Snowboard World Cup in Spindleruv Mlýn, Czech Republic on March 20-21 canceled.SNOOKER China Open in Beijing from March 30-April 5 postponed.SOCCER Asian Champions League: Matches involving Chinese clubs Guangzhou Evergrande, Shanghai Shenhua and Shanghai SIPG postponed to April-May. Beijing FC allowed to play from Feb. 18. Matches involving South Korean clubs Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors, Suwon Samsung Bluewings and FC Seoul to be played with no spectators from March 3. Matches involving Iranian clubs Esteghlal, Persepolis, Shahr Khodro, Sepahan on March 2-3 postponed. All West Zone group matches from March 2 postponed. East Zone matches postponed to May 19-20 (Match Day 3), May 26-27, (Match Day 4), June 16-17 (Match Day 5), and June 23-24 (Match Day 6). Round of 16 postponed to Aug. 11-12 and 25-26, quarterfinals to Sept. 15-16 and 29-30, and the semifinals to Oct. 20-21 and 27-28. Champions League: Valencia vs. Atalanta on March 10; Paris Saint-Germain vs. Borussia Dortmund on March 11; Juventus vs. Lyon on March 17; Barcelona vs. Napoli on March 18; Bayern Munich vs. Chelsea on March 18, no spectators. Europa League: Inter Milan vs. Getafe on March 12; Sevilla vs. Roma on March 12, Basel vs. Eintracht Frankfurt on March 19, postponed. Inter Milan vs. Ludogorets on Feb. 27; Olympiakos vs. Wolverhampton on March 12; LASK vs. Manchester United on March 12; Wolfsburg vs. Shakhtar Donetsk on March 12; Eintracht Frankfurt vs. Basel on March 12; Getafe vs. Inter Milan on March 19; Roma vs. Sevilla on March 19, Copenhagen vs. Istanbul Basaksehir on March 19; Bayer Leverkusen vs. Rangers on March 19, no spectators. Asian women's Olympic qualifying Group B tournament relocated from Wuhan to Sydney from Feb. 3-13. China vs. South Korea playoffs on March 6 and 11 postponed to April 9 and 14, and postponed to June 1-10; China home game in Sydney. Vietnam vs. Australia in C?m Ph? on March 11, no spectators. Asia World Cup qualifying: China vs. Maldives on March 26 and vs. Guam on March 31 moved to Buriram, Thailand, no spectators. Matches from March 23-April 9 postponed: China vs. Maldives, Philippines vs. Guam, Maldives vs. Syria, Guam vs. China, China vs. Philippines, Guam vs. Syria, China vs. Syria, Philippins vs. Maldives, Australia vs. Kuwait, Nepal vs. Taiwan, Kuwait vs. Jordan, Nepal vs. Australia, Australia vs. Taiwan, Nepal vs. Jordan, Taiwan vs. Kuwait, Australia vs. Jordan, Iran vs. Hong Kong, Bahrain vs. Cambodia, Hong Kong vs. Iraq, Cambodia vs. Iran, Iran vs. Bahrain, Iraq vs. Cambodia, Iran vs. Iraq, Bahrain vs. Hong Kong, Saudi Arabia vs. Yemen, Palestine vs. Singapore, Yemen vs. Uzbekistan, Singapore vs. Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia vs. Palestine, Uzbekistan vs. Singapore, Saudi Arabia vs. Uzbekistan, Palestine vs. Yemen, Bangladesh vs. Afghanistan, India vs. Qatar, Afghanistan vs. Oman, Qatar vs. Bangladesh, Bangladesh vs. India, Oman vs. Qatar, Bangladesh vs. Oman, India vs. Afghanistan, Japan vs. Myanmar, Tajikistan vs. Mongolia, Myanmar vs. Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia vs. Japan, Japan vs. Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan vs. Mongolia, Japan vs. Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan vs. Myanmar, United Arab Emirates vs. Malaysia, Thailand vs. Indonesia, Malaysia vs. Vietnam, Indonesia vs. United Arab Emirates, United Arab Emirates vs. Thailand, Vietnam vs. Indonesia, Thailand vs. Malaysia, United Arab Emirates vs. Vietnam, South Korea vs. Turkmenistan, North Korea vs. Sri Lanka, Turkmenistan vs. Lebanon, Sri Lanka vs. South Korea, South Korea vs. North Korea, Lebanon vs. Sri Lanka, South Korea vs. Lebanon, North Korea vs. Turkmenistan. Euro 2020 qualifying playoffs: Slovakia vs. Ireland in Bratislava on March 26, no spectators. Women's Euro 2021 qualifying: Montenegro vs. Ireland in Budva on March 11, no spectators. English Premier League: Manchester City vs. Arsenal on March 11 postponed. La Liga and Segunda Division matches from March 10, no spectators. La Liga from March 12 suspended. Copa del Rey final: Real Sociedad vs. Athletic Bilbao in Seville on April 18 postponed. Serie A, B, C, D and Women's Serie A matches in Lombardy and Veneto regions postponed from Feb. 22. Serie A: 6 matches on Feb. 29-March 2 postponed. All matches from March 4, no spectators. Italian Cup semifinals: Juventus vs. AC Milan on March 4, Napoli vs. Inter Milan on March 5, postponed. Final moved from May 13 to May 20. Bundesliga: Cologne vs. Borussia Monchengladbach on March 11; Fortuna Dusseldorf vs. Paderborn on March 13; Borussia Dortmund vs. Schalke on March 14; Cologne vs. Mainz on March 14; Hoffenheim vs. Hertha Berlino on March 14; Union Berlin vs. Bayern Munich on March 14; Eintracht Frankfurt vs. Borussia Monchengladbach on March 15; Augsburg vs. Wolfsburg on March 15; Werder Bremen vs. Bayer Leverkusen on March 16, no spectators. French league: Strasbourg vs. Paris Saint-Germain on March 7, postponed. All matches in Ligue 1 and 2 from March 13, no spectators. French League Cup final: Paris Saint-Germain vs. Lyon in Paris on April 4 postponed. Algarve Cup final in Portugal on March 11: Italy vs. Germany canceled. Chinese Super League, due to start on Feb. 22, delayed. Iran Pro League: All matches from Feb. 24, no spectators; season suspended from March 4-April 2. J League in Japan: All matches from Feb. 25 postponed. K League in South Korea, due to start on Feb. 29, delayed. Swiss Super League and Challenge League from Feb. 28-March 23 postponed. V League in Vietnam from March 7, no spectators. First League and Second League in Bulgaria from March 8, no spectators. Romania, all league matches from March 9, no spectators. Primeira Liga in Portugal from March 10, no spectators. Ekstraklasa in Poland from March 10, no spectators. Austrian Bundesliga and 2nd Liga from March 10 postponed. Premier League in Egypt from March 10, no spectators. Denmark, all leagues from March 11 suspended. Major League Soccer in United States: Seattle vs. Dallas on March 21 postponed. AFC Cup: All group stage and playoff matches in east zone delayed to April 7. Asian men's futsal championship in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, from Feb. 26-March 8 postponed to Aug. 5-16. Qatar Airways International in Doha with Belgium, Croatia, Portugal, Switzerland from March 26-30 canceled. Men's friendlies: Japan vs. South Africa on March 27 canceled. France vs. Ukraine on March 27; France vs. Finland on March 31, no spectators. Women's friendlies: France vs. North Macedonia on April 10, no spectators.SUMO Spring Tournament in Osaka, Japan from March 8-22, no spectators.SWIMMING Asian water polo championships in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, from Feb. 12-16 canceled. Diving Grand Prix in Madrid from Feb. 14-16: China team withdrew. Diving world series event in Beijing from March 7-9 canceled. Italy Olympic trials in Riccione from March 17-21 canceled. South America championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina from March 25-29 canceled. Nordic Tour: Bergen Festival in Norway from March 28-30 canceled. China Olympic trials in Qingdao from March 28-April 4 moved to May 10-16. African championships in Durban, South Africa from April 17-22 postponed.TABLE TENNIS World team championships in Busan, South Korea, postponed from May 22-29 to June 21-28. Japan Open in Kitakyushu on April 21-26 postponed. South Korea Open in Busan on June 16-21 suspended. Australian Open in Geelong on June 23-28 suspended.TAEKWONDO Asian Olympic qualifying tournament on April 10-11 moved from Wuxi, China to Amman, Jordan.TENNIS Davis Cup: China forfeited World Group I playoff vs. Romania in Piatra Neamt on March 6-7. Davis Cup: Japan vs. Ecuador qualifier in Miki on March 6-7, no spectators. Davis Cup: Italy vs. South Korea in Cagliari on March 6-7, no spectators. Fed Cup Finals in Budapest, Hungary from April 14-19 (with France, Australia, United States, Czech Republic, Russia, Belarus, Spain, Germany, Hungary, Belgium, Slovakia, Switzerland) postponed. Fed Cup playoffs on April 17-18 (Poland vs. Brazil, Mexico vs. Britain, Serbia vs. Canada, Latvia vs. India, Japan vs. Ukraine, Romania vs. Italy, Argentina vs. Kazakhstan, Netherlands vs. China), postponed: Fed Cup Asia-Oceania Group I tournament moved from Dongguan, China to Dubai, United Arab Emirates from March 3-7. ATP, ITF: Suspend events for six weeks over coronavirus. WTA: Xi'an Open in China from April 13-19 canceled. WTA: Kunming Open in Anning, China from April 27-May 3 canceled. ATP Challenger Tour Bergamo Challenger final in Italy on Feb. 23 canceled. Qujing Challenger in China from March 2-8 canceled. Zhuhai Challenger in China from March 9-15 canceled. Shenzhen Challenger in China from March 16-22 canceled. Madrid Challenger from March 23-29 postponed to October. Zhangjiagang Challenger in China from March 23-29 canceled. Taipei Challenger in Taiwan from March 30-April 5 postponed. Nanchang Challenger in China from April 6-12 canceled. Changsha Challenger in China from April 13-19 canceled. Anning Challenger in China from April 20-26 canceled. Seoul Challenger in South Korea from April 27-May 3 postponed to August. Busan Challenger in South Korea from May 4-10 postponed to August. Gwangju Challenger in South Korea from May 11-17 postponed to August. Samarkand Challenger in Uzbekistan from May 11-17 canceled.TRIATHLON Abu Dhabi world series event on March 7 postponed. Olympic mixed relay qualifier moved from Chengdu, China on May 9 to Valencia, Spain on May 1. World Cup in Chengdu, China on May 10 postponed. World Cup in Arzachena, Italy on May 30 postponed to October. Asian Cup in Tainan, Taiwan on March 8, in Beihai, China on April 5, and Dexing, China on April 11 postponed.VOLLEYBALL Beach volleyball World Cup in Yangzhou, China from April 22-26 postponed.WATER POLO Olympic women's qualifying tournament in Trieste, Italy from March 8-15 postponed.WEIGHTLIFTING Asian championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from April 16-25 postponed. Originally moved from Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan. East Asian championships in Seoul from Feb. 26-March 3 postponed. Junior world championships in Bucharest, Romania from March 14-24 canceled. African championships in Vacoas, Mauritius from April 13-20 canceled. European championships in Moscow from April 13-21 postponed to June 13-21.WRESTLING Asian championships in New Delhi from Feb. 20-23: China, North Korea, Turkmenistan teams withdrew. Asian Olympic qualifying event from March 27-29 moved from Xi'an, China to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Kyrgyzstan withdrew as host on Feb. 29.OTHERS Italy declares all sports events without spectators from March 4; suspends all sports from March 9. Iran suspends all sports events from Feb. 24 for 10 days; suspends all sports indefinitely from March 5. Greece declares all sports events without spectators from March 8-22. Bulgaria declares all sports events without spectators from March 8. Slovakia suspends all sports events from March 10. Tokyo Olympic training of volunteers in Japan postponed from February to May. Tokyo Olympic flame lighting dress rehearsal in Olympia, Greece on March 11; flame lighting on March 12, no spectators. Chinese Anti-Doping Agency suspended testing from Feb. 3-21. Winter X Games events in Chongli, China from Feb. 21-23 postponed. Singapore athlete of the year awards on Feb. 26 postponed. International Boxing Association's European Continental Forum in Assisi, Italy on Feb. 29 canceled. International Boxing Association's African Continental Forum in Casablanca, Morocco from March 13-15 postponed. World Chess Federation's presidential council meeting moved from China to United Arab Emirates on Feb. 28-29. World University cross-country championships in Marrakech, Morocco on March 7 postponed. International Weightlifting Federation Congress in Bucharest, Romania on March 13 canceled. World Conference on Prevention of Injury and Illness in Sport in Monte Carlo from March 12-14 postponed to Feb. 11-13, 2021. World Anti-Doping Agency Symposium in Lausanne, Switzerland on March 17-18 canceled. FIFA Council meeting in Asuncion, Paraguay, on March 20 moved to Zurich in June-July. Association of Southeast Asian Nations Para Games in the Philippines from March 20-28 postponed. Hong Kong sports stars awards on March 24 postponed. XTERRA Asia-Pacific Championships (offroad triathlon, duathlon) in Taiwan from March 28-29 canceled. Gulf Cooperation Council Games in Kuwait from April 3-14 postponed. International Equestrian Federation Sports Forum in Lausanne, Switzerland on April 6-7 moved to online. Asian Football Confederation Congress in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on April 16 postponed. SportAccord summit in Beijing moved to Lausanne, Switzerland, on April 19-24. FIFA Congress in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on June 5 postponed to Sept. 18. International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation Congress on June 20 moved from Shanghai to Antwerp, Belgium. Singapore bans spectators at National School Games from January-August. University Athletic Association of the Philippines postponed all sports events.

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