Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

India races to ready Games Village in time

Workers painted walls and mopped rain water at the Commonwealth Games Village as India raced on Sunday to address complaints about dirty and unhygienic facilities one week before the start of the showpiece event.

The Games were supposed to enhance India's image as a rising power, but shoddy construction, dirty accommodation and security fears raised governance and accountability issues in Asia's third largest economy.

Several top athletes, including world champion sprinter Usain Bolt, pulled out, removing some of the shine from the event held every four years for former British colonies.

Two more Australian athletes, cyclist Travis Meyer and table tennis player Stephanie Sang, pulled out on Sunday. This comes a day after Britain's number one tennis player Elena Baltacha withdrew because of concerns about disease and hygiene.

On Sunday, Indian organizing committee officials met to review the work at the Games Village where masons plastered walls while workers dried out the basement of the Village which sits on the flooded plains of the Yamuna river.

"All finishing work is going on in full swing," said Dalbir Singh, mayor of the Games Village where the athletes will stay.

"It's a world class facility with some minor issues and work is going on to fix those problems."

Most of the 34 apartment blocs are gleaming and spacious and fitted with Italian marble. But much of what is good about the facility was overshadowed by athletes' complaints of dirtiness and unfinished work in some of the living quarters.

Snake, Tobacco spit

South Africa's High Commissioner to India, Harris Majeke, told reporters a snake had been found in the room of an athlete at the Games village.

"That was really a threat to the lives of our athletes," he said, complaining of filth in the living quarters. "When everything is done, then we will ask our teams to come."

The Times Now news channel said about 150 rooms meant for athletes were uninhabitable.

Indian boxer Akhil Kumar's bed caved in on Saturday. It was found the mattress had just been placed on the bed frame without any support underneath.

"Laborers have done a very bad job. They had spit 'paan' (chewing tobacco) on the walls, stains of which are almost unremovable," Lalit Bhanot, secretary general of the Games organizing committee, told Reuters.

"We are identifying rooms which are dirty and shutting them down. But we have adequate rooms so there is nothing to worry about."

India was awarded the Games in 2003 but did not begin proper preparations until two years ago. Michael Fennell, chief of the Commonwealth Games Federation, has said India's image has taken a beating.

Athletes from 20 countries have arrived so far, including Scotland and Canada, which had delayed its arrival until Sunday.

The English team, which had checked into hotels because their accommodation was not ready, moved some support staff into the Village on Sunday. The athletes will follow on Monday.

"Work is on track. About 600 flats will be handed over by tomorrow (Monday) and everything will be complete by Wednesday," Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit told reporters.

India had hoped to use the Games to display its growing global economic and political influence, rivaling neighbor China which put on a spectacular 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

Instead, they have become a major embarrassment for the world's largest democracy, where infrastructure projects have progressed slowly and are a drag on economic growth.

Desperate officials on Friday asked the Indian Army to build a temporary bridge to replace the US$1.1 million footbridge that collapsed last week. The bridge, providing access to the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, should be finished within five days.

The bridge collapse and a suspected militant attack on two foreign visitors threw the Games into crisis. An outbreak of dengue fever has only compounded worries.

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Australia Olympic chief says India not fit for Games

The Commonwealth Games should never have been awarded to India, Australia's Olympic chief said on Friday as more top athletes pulled out of the event plagued by filthy accommodation, shoddy construction and security fears.

As athletes begin arriving in Delhi, authorities are still working on completing Games venues, forcing some teams to take up temporary accommodation at hotels.

"I don't think it is a cultural thing. When you agree to host (a Games) you are required to provide the basics in terms of health and hygiene for the athletes," Australian Olympic Committee President John Coates said.

"The Games shouldn't have been awarded to Delhi in hindsight."

Cyclist Greg Henderson became the first New Zealand athlete to withdraw over concerns about health and security. A dengue fever epidemic has hit Delhi and two foreign visitors were shot and wounded by suspected militants in the city on Sunday.

Olympic cycling champion Geraint Thomas and three other Welsh riders also opted out of the Games, due to start on October 3.

India had hoped to use the Games to display its growing global economic and political influence, rivaling China.

Instead, they have become a major embarrassment for the government, which is trying to fend off criticism.

Reuters reporters have also seen children working at Games construction sites, despite it being illegal to employ minors.

"It is vital that all remedial work that has already started continues with the greatest urgency," Commonwealth Games Federation President Michael Fennell said in a statement.

Critics say the chaotic planning and execution of the Games highlight India's challenge of bringing many public sector infrastructure projects up to international standards.

The Games, held every four years for mostly former British colonies, are estimated to have cost US$6 billion.

The Delhi Games may turn out to be the most compromised since a 1986 boycott of the Games in Britain, when 32 nations stayed away because of then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government's position over apartheid South Africa.

Several nations have voiced concern over the state of the Games. India, Asia's third largest economy, was awarded them in 2003 but did not begin proper preparations until two years ago.

The Australian and New Zealand prime ministers said they understood if their athletes decided not to take part.

But England said it would send 551 athletes to the Games because there were signs of improvement on the ground, and said the first group of 22 were leaving on Thursday.

Kenya said it would send a 240-strong team after receiving security assurances from India, officials said, though several of its top athletes have withdrawn because of illness or fatigue.

Wales also gave its team the all-clear to go.

New Zealand, Canada and Scotland have delayed their arrivals because of poor accommodation at the Games village, with heavy monsoon rain and the dengue epidemic adding to images of filthy apartments and roaming stray dogs.

"Security in place"

Commonwealth Games Federation CEO Mike Hooper said he was hopeful the Games would get off the ground, given a new sense of urgency among Indian officials.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reviewed preparations with senior ministers, an official in his office said, in what was seen as a last-ditch effort to avoid teams withdrawing.

England said in a statement that its advance party "are now seeing the improved levels of resourcing which are required" but added that it would monitor the situation daily "to ensure the village and stadia are safe and fit for purpose."

Suresh Kalmadi, chairman of the Delhi organizing committee, said no team would pull out. "I can assure you that security is well in place. Now if some people have their own conception (of security), I can't help," he told reporters.

The federal government ordered the organizing committee to hand over management of the Games Village, which will house 6,500 athletes. More than 1,000 workers were sent to clean apartments.

By contrast, preparations for November's Asian Games in China, which held a successful Olympics in 2008, are on track, with organizers in Guangzhou handing over the athletes' village to the Asian Games authorities for sign-off this week.

Many sporting events have hit trouble before opening, such as the 2004 Athens Olympics, and some of Delhi's infrastructure projects, including a new metro and airport, have won praise.

But polls show widespread public shame. Singh stands accused of failing to recognize that the Games carry huge prestige. Much of the Congress-led government remains focused on its rural vote.

New Zealand chef de mission Dave Currie said organizers had ignored problems. "Every time we raised an issue (we were told) 'yes that will be fixed tomorrow', but you know clearly that it won't be fixed tomorrow," he said. "And they weren't."

World discus champion Dani Samuels of Australia pulled out as did England's world triple jump champion Phillips Idowu and four other champions. Triple Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica is the highest-profile athlete to skip the event.

A portion of false ceiling in the weightlifting venue caved in on Wednesday, a day after the collapse of a footbridge by the main stadium, injuring 27 workers.

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