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Rio enters one-year sprint to Olympic Games

-

The one-year countdown to the Rio Olympics began Wednesday with officials promising to overcome Brazil's usual chaos in a Summer Games that will transform the city and thrill the world.

"All the construction work is on schedule," Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes told journalists in a nearly finished arena inside the giant Olympic Park building site.

With 12 months left to complete the challenge, it's like "the end of a marathon," he said.

At a ceremony, visiting International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach praised the preparations, while President Dilma Rousseff vowed Brazil would "delight" the world.

A picture released by the Brazilian Olympic Committee shows the Olympic torch held beside Rio's...
A picture released by the Brazilian Olympic Committee shows the Olympic torch held beside Rio's landmark statue of Christ the Redeemer, atop the Corcovado mountain on August 5, 2015
Alex Ferro, Rio2016/AFP

On August 5, 2016, the Olympic torch will end its own marathon -- being flown around the globe and carried by 12,000 people through Brazil -- when it lights the flame for the opening ceremony in Rio's Maracana stadium.

Carlos Nuzman, president of the Rio Olympic organizing committee, reeled off figures illustrating the scope of the world's biggest sporting event -- and of Rio's commitment.

There will be 206 countries represented -- the newest being recently recognized South Sudan -- and 10,500 athletes competing in 42 sports over 17 days. Right after, the Paralympics will see 4,350 athletes from 176 countries in 23 sports.

To face the onslaught, Rio is assembling the equivalent of eight football fields of sporting gear -- "a million items," Nuzman said -- and 45,000 volunteer workers, with 25,000 on call for the Paralympics.

Rio's mayor Eduardo Paes speaks during a press conference at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro...
Rio's mayor Eduardo Paes speaks during a press conference at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5, 2015
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

"We are continuing to work, because there is still much to do," Rousseff said.

- Pollution scandal -

These will be the first Olympics held in South America and a chance for Brazil, the world's seventh largest economy, to look beyond a growing domestic brew of corruption and economic trouble.

Already the Olympic Park is 82 percent ready and Olympic Village 89 percent complete, Paes said.

Debris floats near the Rio-Niteroi bridge at the Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  on July 31...
Debris floats near the Rio-Niteroi bridge at the Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 31, 2014
Yasuyoshi Chiba, AFP

But the generally positive picture darkens in what environmentalists and Rio residents describe as the horrific pollution in Guanabara Bay, where sailing and windsurfing contests will take place.

Environment experts say most of the sewage produced by the 12 million people in greater Rio goes untreated directly into the bay.

In addition, dozens of rivers leading to the bay are filled with garbage.

In its original bid to host the Games, one of Rio's promises was to reduce that pollution by 80 percent -- a goal that no one now even pretends can be met.

Officials are on the defensive and on Wednesday they once more insisted that there was no danger to athletes' health or to their boats.

Workers at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5  2015  one year before the start of the Ol...
Workers at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5, 2015, one year before the start of the Olympic Games
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

"The sailing athletes will be protected," Paes said, estimating that pollution had already been reduced by 50 percent and "probably" will reach 60 percent by the Games.

- Changing Rio for good -

There are debates over whether Olympics are good for cities or burdensome vanity projects, but in Rio the occasion has been an opportunity to escape decades of underinvestment, Nuzman said.

"No city has had the transformation of its infrastructure as has Rio," he said.

Workers leave a newly inaugurated tunnel linking the Barra da Tijuca and Deodoro Olympic poles for t...
Workers leave a newly inaugurated tunnel linking the Barra da Tijuca and Deodoro Olympic poles for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, on August 4, 2015
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP/File

Paes said that Rio had made an attractive candidate city not because of all its infrastructure but the fact it had so little -- and could use the Games to improve.

The biggest positive change will be in transport, linking up a sprawling city where the metro currently only serves a narrow strip and it can take hours in traffic to go from the center to the Olympic Park. A new metro line and dedicated lanes for express buses are on track to consign those nightmare journeys to memory, officials say.

But Paes, a flamboyant politician said to have presidential ambitions, went beyond municipal matters, stating that a good Olympics will show the world a new Brazil.

"There will be a legacy to create in this country a culture that things can be done on time," he said, calling Brazil "a country where everything is delayed, everything is beyond its budget."

"We want to show the other side," he said, joking that tropical Rio might even feel ready to "bid for the Winter Games."

"Who knows if climate change will let us do that?"

The one-year countdown to the Rio Olympics began Wednesday with officials promising to overcome Brazil’s usual chaos in a Summer Games that will transform the city and thrill the world.

“All the construction work is on schedule,” Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes told journalists in a nearly finished arena inside the giant Olympic Park building site.

With 12 months left to complete the challenge, it’s like “the end of a marathon,” he said.

At a ceremony, visiting International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach praised the preparations, while President Dilma Rousseff vowed Brazil would “delight” the world.

A picture released by the Brazilian Olympic Committee shows the Olympic torch held beside Rio's...

A picture released by the Brazilian Olympic Committee shows the Olympic torch held beside Rio's landmark statue of Christ the Redeemer, atop the Corcovado mountain on August 5, 2015
Alex Ferro, Rio2016/AFP

On August 5, 2016, the Olympic torch will end its own marathon — being flown around the globe and carried by 12,000 people through Brazil — when it lights the flame for the opening ceremony in Rio’s Maracana stadium.

Carlos Nuzman, president of the Rio Olympic organizing committee, reeled off figures illustrating the scope of the world’s biggest sporting event — and of Rio’s commitment.

There will be 206 countries represented — the newest being recently recognized South Sudan — and 10,500 athletes competing in 42 sports over 17 days. Right after, the Paralympics will see 4,350 athletes from 176 countries in 23 sports.

To face the onslaught, Rio is assembling the equivalent of eight football fields of sporting gear — “a million items,” Nuzman said — and 45,000 volunteer workers, with 25,000 on call for the Paralympics.

Rio's mayor Eduardo Paes speaks during a press conference at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro...

Rio's mayor Eduardo Paes speaks during a press conference at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5, 2015
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

“We are continuing to work, because there is still much to do,” Rousseff said.

– Pollution scandal –

These will be the first Olympics held in South America and a chance for Brazil, the world’s seventh largest economy, to look beyond a growing domestic brew of corruption and economic trouble.

Already the Olympic Park is 82 percent ready and Olympic Village 89 percent complete, Paes said.

Debris floats near the Rio-Niteroi bridge at the Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  on July 31...

Debris floats near the Rio-Niteroi bridge at the Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 31, 2014
Yasuyoshi Chiba, AFP

But the generally positive picture darkens in what environmentalists and Rio residents describe as the horrific pollution in Guanabara Bay, where sailing and windsurfing contests will take place.

Environment experts say most of the sewage produced by the 12 million people in greater Rio goes untreated directly into the bay.

In addition, dozens of rivers leading to the bay are filled with garbage.

In its original bid to host the Games, one of Rio’s promises was to reduce that pollution by 80 percent — a goal that no one now even pretends can be met.

Officials are on the defensive and on Wednesday they once more insisted that there was no danger to athletes’ health or to their boats.

Workers at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5  2015  one year before the start of the Ol...

Workers at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on August 5, 2015, one year before the start of the Olympic Games
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

“The sailing athletes will be protected,” Paes said, estimating that pollution had already been reduced by 50 percent and “probably” will reach 60 percent by the Games.

– Changing Rio for good –

There are debates over whether Olympics are good for cities or burdensome vanity projects, but in Rio the occasion has been an opportunity to escape decades of underinvestment, Nuzman said.

“No city has had the transformation of its infrastructure as has Rio,” he said.

Workers leave a newly inaugurated tunnel linking the Barra da Tijuca and Deodoro Olympic poles for t...

Workers leave a newly inaugurated tunnel linking the Barra da Tijuca and Deodoro Olympic poles for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, on August 4, 2015
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP/File

Paes said that Rio had made an attractive candidate city not because of all its infrastructure but the fact it had so little — and could use the Games to improve.

The biggest positive change will be in transport, linking up a sprawling city where the metro currently only serves a narrow strip and it can take hours in traffic to go from the center to the Olympic Park. A new metro line and dedicated lanes for express buses are on track to consign those nightmare journeys to memory, officials say.

But Paes, a flamboyant politician said to have presidential ambitions, went beyond municipal matters, stating that a good Olympics will show the world a new Brazil.

“There will be a legacy to create in this country a culture that things can be done on time,” he said, calling Brazil “a country where everything is delayed, everything is beyond its budget.”

“We want to show the other side,” he said, joking that tropical Rio might even feel ready to “bid for the Winter Games.”

“Who knows if climate change will let us do that?”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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