By Andrew Warshaw in Istanbul

Recep Tayyip_Erdoan_22-03-12March 22 - The Turkish Government today gave the broadest public hint yet that the country would like to stage the European Championships in 2020, which could cause serious problems for Istanbul's campaign to host the Olympics and Paralympics in the same year.

Turkey lost out controversially by one vote to France for the 2016 tournament, widely believed to have been the result of UEFA President Michel Platini lobbying support for his homeland.

Since then there has been intense speculation as to whether Turkey would re-apply, given the fact that Istanbul is planning to bid for the Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games in the same year.

In a speech to the UEFA Congress in Istanbul today, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (pictured) confirmed in one brief sentence that his country were interested in balloting once again for the Euros.

"I would like to repeat the request to hold the European Championships 2020 in Istanbul," he told delegates at the end of a 10-minute address, speaking in Turkish with simultaneous translation.

Reports have frequently appeared in the Turkish press claiming that Platini has privately promised the country the Championships after they controversially lost out in May 2010.

But in recent months, Erdoğan and others have reiterated that bidding for the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics in Istanbul was the priority following unsuccessful bids for the 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 Games.

There have even been suggestions that the Government is blocking the Turkish Football Federation's (TFF) wish to stage the Euros, which are being expanded to 24 teams in 2016, meaning only a handful of countries would have the infrastructure to stage the event on their own.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) will choose the 2020 host city in September next year and the TFF has said in the past that it will consider bidding for the Euros the same year only when it is known whether Istanbul makes the shortlist for the Games.

The situation is complicated by the fact that, with invitations going out to prospective Euro hosts next week, Turkey cannot realistically wait too long before deciding whether to go ahead.

Michel Platini_and_Recep_Tayyip_Erdoan_22-03-121
Staging three such major events in the space of four months would almost certainly prove logistically impossible.

It would also cause marketing problems and lead to fears that enough sponsorship could be raised for all the events, even in an economy like Turkey's whose success is currently outstripping most of the rest of the world.

Earlier this year Turkey's Sports Minister Suat Kılıç claimed "all our energies are focussed on the Olympics" and the TTF said they would not bid for Euro 2020 if Istanbul was still in with the chance of hosting the Olympics and Paralympics. 

But Erdoğan, who met Platini (pictured left) for private talks earlier this week on Turkey's match fixing crisis, took the opportunity to tell UEFA's 53 members that his country was in the process of beefing up its stadium construction.

"Turkey is in love with football," he told the audience here at the Istanbul Congress Centre.

"Although we started late, we have a large football industry and modern facilities all around the country.

"We are building 18 new stadiums and 352 artificial and natural facilities.

"We are also solving our shortcomings in infrastructure with train connections, airports and other facilities."

Erdoğan's remarks were highly significant in terms of their timing.

Next week, UEFA will open the bidding process for Euro 2020 with a decision on the hosts to be taken at the end of 2013 or early 2014.

Officials at Istanbul 2020, where a bid leader still has to be officially appointed, tried to put a brave face on the unexpected turn of events.

"Turkey's President, Prime Minister and Sports Minister have repeatedly reiterated that Istanbul 2020 is a strategic national priority, and a personal passion," they said in a statement.

"Every level of government and every party is aligned behind this bid: the Olympic and Paralympic Games are seen as a crucial stimulus for Turkey's national development strategy.

"Should Turkey bid for Euro 2020, that level of commitment will remain guaranteed."

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