Dinh Khac Dien, Deputy Director of the provincial Department of
Culture, Sports and Tourism, said the province has prepared almost 4,000
hotel rooms, including over 1,800 of international standards, to
welcome artists and tourists on this occasion.
The organising board has also established a press centre, capable of
accommodating hundreds of journalists who come to cover the event.
Taxi drivers and volunteers have undergone professional training to
make the showcase of Vietnamese traditional martial arts a success, said
Mr Dien.
Belgium is among the strong delegations, which will bring to the event a new school related to water.
Its water martial art was founded in Brussels, Belgium, by a
Vietnamese Belgian named Huynh Chieu Duong, based on daily life of
fishermen in Vietnam.
The school now has a 120-strong membership, of them 100 are Belgian.
The water martial art is expected to officially join in the Vietnam
Traditional Martial Art Federation by late July, when a delegation will
come to Vietnam to attend the Tay Son-Binh Dinh Festival.