| Fans face hotel penalty prices(China Daily)
 Updated: 2006-01-11 06:16
 
 
 Looking for a cheap room in Germany during the soccer World Cup? Think again. 
 
Organizers of the month-long 
tournament and the German tourist industry had promised reasonable rates but 
fans looking for affordable accommodation now are likely to be disappointed. Costa Rican supporters wanting to watch their side open the tournament 
against hosts Germany in Munich on June 9 are among the most unlucky. 
 Staying at one of the city's top hotels would set you back 1,294 euros 
(US$1,565) per night over the weekend from June 9. The same double room costs 
just 167 euros next month. 
 Even a more modest four-star establishment is charging an overnight rate of 
281 euros compared with 59 euros for the room in mid-February or mid-August. 
 Despite the price hikes, many hotels are already full. 
 Germany is expecting some one million foreigners to flood in while the 
football lasts. England is likely to send the largest contingent, with 100,000 
people expected to head to Germany. 
 Its Football Supporters' Federation (FSF) is already concerned about "price 
gouging" and has met officials from Frankfurt, Nuremberg and Cologne, where 
England play their opening matches, to discuss campsite availability and 
emergency accommodation. 
 Higher levels 
 Kevin Miles, FSF's international coordinator, said a lot of hotels appeared 
to have raised overnight rates to the higher levels they charge when a trade 
fair is in town. The increase can be as much as five-fold. 
 "Sadly, there's a certain inevitability," he said. "The Germans have a word 
for it, 'Kapitalismus'. Other countries do it too. It's a factor of supply and 
demand." 
 World Cup organizers argue that they have reached deals with large chains and 
privately-run hotels to charge only the standard, not the trade-fair, rate. 
 More than 500 hotels have signed up, offering 50,000 rooms. 
 
 "These are great rates, not for example what you'd be paying in Munich during 
the Oktoberfest or an international fair," a spokeswoman said. 
 
 
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