RIO DE JANEIRO: The Rio de Janeiro 2016 summer
Olympics move firmly into the spotlight this week with the
International Olympic Committee in town to monitor
progress and the football World Cup wrapping up.
The Olympics are the country’s second global sports event it
has committed itself to staging and following the end of the
world’s biggest single sports event on Sunday (today), Rio
enters the final stretch of delivering a troubled project.
Called the “worst ever” preparations by IOC Vice President
John Coates as recently as April, Rio organisers have been
with their backs to the wall from the start, trying to play
catchup with a schedule they had fallen behind.
IOC President Thomas Bach met Brazil President Dilma
Rousseff in Brasilia on Friday before returning to Rio to attend
the World Cup final.
“We are seeing great progress and appreciate the commitment
of the president and the government of Brazil for the Games,”
Bach told reporters.
“We believe they will be very successful.
“The German lawyer took charge of the IOC after winning
elections in September and has been trying to instil a sense of
urgency with organisers ever since.
Brazil had to face years of criticism in the run-up to the World
Cup with delays in construction and completion of stadiums
forcing world football’s governing body FIFA to say
organisers “needed a kick up the backside.”
Fears of widespread protests and major problems with security
and transportation failed to materialise during the month-long
tournament seen overall as successful and the IOC are hoping
Olympic organisers had drawn valuable conclusions for their
own 16-day event.
“The World Cup is a bit like a test event for the IOC,” an
Olympic source with direct knowledge of preparations told
Reuters on condition of anonymity on Friday.
“To be able to learn from it and use that knowledge for the Rio
Olympics.
“The source also said the IOC was “explaining, explaining,
explaining,” in order to avoid a backlash from citizens over
huge spending for the multi-billion dollar sports event as that
directed against FIFA.
While ordinary Brazilians supported their football team, many
were angry at the billions their government spent for building
or refurbishing stadiums and World Cup-related infrastructure
projects instead of injecting the cash into social welfare
projects.
The IOC would be pumping what would amount eventually to
about $1.5 billion back towards local organisers through
revenues generated for the event from sponsors and
broadcasters, the official said.
The truth, however, remains Rio organisers have no time to
waste with the first test event for the Games — sailing — set
for August.
From cleaning up Guanabara Bay, site of Olympic sailing, to
speeding up construction on the city’s second Olympic sports
park in Deodoro, still in its infancy, to completing key
transportation projects pledged in the bid file, they have their
work cut out.
“This is a time where a lot of work is being done but it is not
yet very visible but progress is being made. The athletes
village for example is 40 percent complete,” the Olympic
source said.
With the World Cup lights going out over Brazil after
Sunday’s final another light will be shining brightly on the
country and until 2016 it will resemble more that of an
interrogation light.
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Sunday, 13 July 2014
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