1989 Southeast Asian Games
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1989 Southeast Asian Games
Summary
1989 Southeast Asian Games is a multi-sport event[1]. It draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (multi_sport_event category, ranking #86 of 344).[2]
Key Facts
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games is in the country of Malaysia[3].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's instance of is recorded as multi-sport event[4].
- The location of 1989 Southeast Asian Games was Kuala Lumpur[5].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's edition number is recorded as 15[6].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games comprises badminton at the 1989 South East Asian Games[7].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's officially opened by is recorded as Azlan Shah I of Perak[8].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games began on August 20, 1989[9].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games ended on August 31, 1989[10].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games took place on 1989[11].
- Among those involved in 1989 Southeast Asian Games was Philippines at the 1989 Southeast Asian Games[12].
- Among those involved in 1989 Southeast Asian Games was Malaysia at the 1989 Southeast Asian Games[13].
- Among those involved in 1989 Southeast Asian Games was Vietnam at the 1989 Southeast Asian Games[14].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's topic's main category is recorded as Category:1989 SEA Games[15].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games involved {'amount': '+9'} participants[16].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's sports season of league or competition is recorded as SEA Games[17].
- 1989 Southeast Asian Games's date of official closure is recorded as August 31, 1989[18].
Body
When and Where
1989 Southeast Asian Games took place on 1989[11]. It began on August 20, 1989[9]. It ended on August 31, 1989[10]. It took place at Kuala Lumpur[5]. It is in the country of Malaysia[3].
Context
1989 Southeast Asian Games's instance of is recorded as multi-sport event[4].
Participants
Recorded participant include Philippines at the 1989 Southeast Asian Games[12], Malaysia at the it[13], and Vietnam at the it[14]. It involved {'amount': '+9'} participants[16].
Why It Matters
1989 Southeast Asian Games draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (multi_sport_event category, ranking #86 of 344).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]