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Good Luck Sochi, You'll Need It

Next Winter Games venue abuts war zones, and has enraged environmentalists and 1,500 citizens losing their homes.

By Geoff Dembicki, 24 Feb 2010, TheTyee.ca

SochiMayor

This should be interesting: Sochi Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov

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Russian politicians have supermodels for aides. You'd think that, anyway, after a Tuesday morning press conference that saw Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson and Premier Gordon Campbell unofficially hand off the Olympics to their Slavic equivalents.

Russia will host the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, a sub-tropical resort town on the Black Sea. The Robson Square Media Centre was packed with Russian delegates, eager to watch Sochi's mayor and the vice-governor of surrounding Krasnodar Region shimmer with Olympics gleam. Several ski-thin blonde knockouts that wouldn't have been out of place in New York Fashion Week helped run the event.

The supermodels -- or aides, if you like -- were joined by a brusque Russian man who evicted at least one journalist from his seat. "Sorry, this is not free," he said, immediately slapping a sticker onto the still-warm chair. For at least the past eight years, Vancouver critics have worried about the social and economic consequences of hosting the Olympics. Think we've got it bad here? As Russia prepares to welcome the world to beautiful Sochi, critics charge the former Soviet giant with strong-arming residents, devastating the environment and disregarding security crises right on its doorstep.

Sochi's preparations 'out of control'

Earlier this month, the World Wildlife Fund condemned Russian Games organizers. "We believe that Olympic preparations have gone out of control, the quality of construction is low, and huge damage has been done to the environment," WWF Russia chief Igor Chestin said in a statement. The impact of a US$8 billion highway and railroad project linked to the Games was studied for two weeks by a team of less than ten people, the group claimed. Quiet bureaucratic decisions altered borders of the UNESCO-protected Caucasian Biosphere Reserve so a road could cut through.

Meanwhile, Parliamentary amendments let organizers cut endangered trees to build facilities. The WWF acknowledged some 2009 public consultation, but doubted whether it was given serious weight.

Nonsense, repliedOlympstroy, the state agency responsible for Games construction. It claimed all work meets international green standards.

'They'll have to shoot me': resident

In February 2009, a major story in German news source Der Speigel revealed serious Olympics concerns among Sochi residents. The coastal city has a population of over 400,000. Fifteen-hundred people are being forcibly resettled for Olympics construction, according to the report. A resident of nearby Adler told Der Speigel her house would be bulldozed for a Games stadium. "I'm not going," the woman said. "If they want my land, they'll have to shoot me."

Last May, Human Rights Watch researcher Jane Buchanan warned the Sochi Games could be tainted by abuse unless organizers changed their ways. There's no working process to let residents know their homes and property will be seized, she wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

"The government has the right to expropriate land that is needed for the Games. But when it exercises that right, it must do so in a way that doesn't trammel the rights of those concerned," she wrote. "Too often, government appears to be insensitive to these needs"

2014 Games in security crisis zone?

Sochi is practically in the backyard of three security no-gos: Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Chechnya. The first two fought a short but bloody 2008 break-away war with Georgia. Afterwards, the Georgian National Olympic Committee urged the IOC to move the Games from Sochi, for security reasons.

"Holding the Olympic Games on this territory," read a letter to IOC President Jacques Rogge, "will endanger the lives of participating sportsmen and sportswomen and undermine the image of the world's premier sporting event."

The IOC declined the request, arguing security is up to host countries to figure out.

Earlier this month, Russia signed a military agreement with Abkhazia. The 2014 Olympics host was one of only four countries to officially recognize the tiny nation -- and its neighbour South Ossetia -- after the 2008 war. This month's deal allows Russia to formally operate a military base in Abkhazia. Georgian officials condemned the arrangement, likening it to Soviet-era East Germany.

"I personally won't have anything to do with the current Georgian president," said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. "He's persona non grata for Russia."

Sochi's task 'to minimize difficulties'

At Tuesday's Vancouver press conference, Robertson and Campbell pledged to share lessons from the 2010 Winter Games. "You are in for the time of your life in Sochi," Campbell stated emphatically.

For now, Russians swarm Vancouver, looking for clues to their upcoming host experience. There's so many visitors, the Russian embassy is "on overdrive", according to one delegate. Lots attended Tuesday's conference. Their expensive cologne and perfume drowned out the stale sweat of reporters seated among them.

Organizers let three journalists ask the Sochi representatives questions. One was about weather. Another was directed at Campbell. The first reporter asked whether Sochi would tolerate protesters during its Games. In addition to concerns about the environment, relocations and security, observers worry about huge costs, unfinished venues, the rights of indigenous Circassions and heavy free speech restrictions.

Protesters are "indeed possible," Sochi mayor Anatoli N. Pakhomov said through a translator. "Our task it to minimize the difficulties that the preparation and running of the Winter Olympics may bring to the residents of Sochi and neighbouring areas."

From one Olympics host city to the next, good luck!  [Tyee]

20  Comments:

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  • zalm

    1 year ago

    higher learning

    Well, the reason I continued protesting the Owe-limp-ics was to change the way that the IOC does business. I'll bet this has an untoward effect - the only games will from now on be held in countries with dismal human rights records where the government won't mind strong-arming residents into whatever suits the corporate profiteers to the games, to say nothing of the IOC's coffers. And the IOC's reputation as a fascist organization with kleptocratic tendencies will remain unchanged.

    All together now - cheer as the 2022 Games are opened by the Dear Dead Leader in North Korea!

    Fuck off, Rogge; Pound, I'm gonna get your Canadian citizenship stripped if it's the last thing I do so fuck off now before it's too late, fuck off Samaranch whatever you're doing here, and above all, FUCK OFF Owe-limp-ics!

  • make_up_another...

    1 year ago

    Olympic Dream: Pray They Never Come True

    I guess all you can do is hope and pray that your home city never gets selected to host the Olympics. The IOC should stick to the countries run by despots because they are made for each other.

    The Nazi propaganda minister Goebbels was so impressed with the ceremonies of the olympics that he stole the whole idea for use in Nazi rallies.

  • BC Boy

    1 year ago

    Good luck Sochi

    Some poster named zalm sed:

    "Fuck off, Rogge; Pound, I'm gonna get your Canadian citizenship stripped if it's the last thing I do so fuck off now before it's too late, fuck off Samaranch whatever you're doing here, and above all, FUCK OFF Owe-limp-ics!"

    yeah right, good luck in getting that to happen. Might as well not waste energy on writing four letter words there.

    Samaranch has every right to be in Canada as a visitor.

    Idea: Let's send the Olympic Resistance Network organisers and Chris Shaw to Sochi to try and derail the Olympics there.

    I"m sure ol' Chris will want to try again, and for good measure, let's send David Eby to Sochi so he can be the man with the cape to defend civil liberties, justice and the Canadian way.

  • RickW

    1 year ago

    It's really all OK.....

    ....the world will be ending in 2012 anyway.

  • Van Isle

    1 year ago

    Dollars to doughnuts the

    Dollars to doughnuts the Russian mafia is involved up to their neck in the Sochi olympics. And that means the mafia will have an "in" with the IOC.

  • southdeltawalker

    1 year ago

    SOchi WHAT?

    Could be the Olympic spectacle will grind to a halt in Sochi.
    We all know the real story of the Olympics now.
    The "world" comes to town and parties on and we get the hangover of debt and cuts to services-what a deal.
    Anyways the Sochi bid is in such bad shape that there is doubt that it will really happen.
    We can only hope.

  • mary jane

    1 year ago

    this says it all

    this site shows how simple it could be to have a world that does not victimize others
    http://www.youtube.com:80/watch?v=qYtNwmXKIvM

  • Skywalker

    1 year ago

    Remember Victor Litvinenko.

    I guess the IOC really has no idea how Russia is run these days. Van Isle is right on!

  • Takuan

    1 year ago

    in time

    being an oylmpic athlete will earn opprobrium instead of money. Just as driving big, stupid gasoline vehicles like Hummers has.

    Make the association: the five rings and name mean bad things for the world and humanity, spread the meme, it will grow.

    Sorry IOC, you will have to find new ways of maintaining your imperial lifestyles. Perhaps organ-legging or child prostitution?

  • W Laurier

    1 year ago

    Suggestion

    Since Canada is the worst place in the world and lives under the "Jackboot of Fascism" I would suggest all our anti-poverty activists go to Sochi and demonstrate there. This would have the effect of shaming Gordon Campbell ending homelessness in less than one hour.

    Further, since there will be Canadians at those Olympics, and given that most Canadians (ie those who don't vote NDP) are fascist, we must send David's Eby's Legal Observers to Sochi to make sure the Canadians at the Sochi games don't act all fascisty and to see how a good police force, in this case the Russian National Police, handles legitimate and legal protest.

    What is more, I am willing to pay the airfare of anyone reading this to go to Sochi and report back how much better it is than Canada. I will even pay for Eby to fly business class.

  • Takuan

    1 year ago

    Wilfred?

    you appear a silly person.

  • BC Boy

    1 year ago

    Obviously never been out of the house

    "Since Canada is the worst place in the world and lives under the "Jackboot of Fascism""

    The above poster has obviously never been much out of the house.

    Canada is much freer than many nations, If the above poster wants to see political oppression,
    Iran would be a good place to start. From there the tour continues on to Myamar (Burma), and then
    the tour can end with a satisfying two week tour around North Korea.

    In time for the summer tourist season, the tour can be extended for a two week stay in Somalia or Sudan.

  • W Laurier

    1 year ago

    Ahhhh.....

    Check tongue, firmly planted in cheek.....

    It was a jab at the the class warriors, BC Boy. I have lived in a military dictatorship and in more than one third world country. I count myself very lucky to live in Canada.

    Still, I want Eby to go the Sochi and see how long he lasts there....

  • lynn

    1 year ago

    "Just another marketing and investment decision by BelieveBC"

    How the luge run got so steep:

    In an interview from his Leipzig lab, Gurgel said that the extremely high speed of the Whistler track was not a function of his design intentions or engineering decisions, but of marketing and investment decisions on behalf of the Vancouver Olympic Committee, VANOC. "It wasn't desired or demanded that the track be as fast as it is," he says of the design contract he won in 2004. He defends the design, but says its speed and its jarring turns were considered acceptable tradeoffs for a more appealing location.
    Initially, the luge track was to be located at Grouse Mountain, north of Vancouver, allowing a shallower, more traditional course at very fast but not extraordinary speeds. But VANOC soon asked that the track be moved to a location in Whistler that was far steeper, Gurgel says, because they wanted it to be commercially viable after the Games. He told them that this would create a much faster track, and there were no objections.
    In the traditional discussions about the trade-off between safety for athletes and track visibility for audiences, no one demanded that higher walls than usual be built on the final fast curves, he says.
    And no objections arose when it became clear two years ago that the chosen steep terrain had resulted in a faster track than planned. "The track had to be near Whistler, for use after the Olympics. You don't want to ruin an investment," he says. "So the track is on terrain that's a little steep."......

    "But the track's design, and the non-engineering factors that pushed it to such high speeds, continue to worry insiders. An investigation by the Wall Street Journal found that VANOC had been informed of the higher speed and had signed off on it, along with the sporting federations, but that officials in the federations decided last year never to design such a fast track again. The high speed and sharp corners were not considered desirable features for other tracks.
    "That was not an engineering decision," Bob Storey, president of the International Federation of Bobsleigh and Tobogganing, told the Wall Street Journal. "That was a commercial decision."

  • lynn

    1 year ago

    should be quotation marks here:

    "In an interview....."

  • freebear

    1 year ago

    I wonder how many NHL players will want to compete

    next to Chechnya?

    What if Canada is still part of the Afghanistan occupation in 2014?

  • Skywalker

    1 year ago

    Earlier Error

    It should have been " Remember Alexander (Sasha) Livineneko who was the former FSB agent poisoned in London after writing a book exposing the whole Russian regime as a bunch of murderous gangsters. That is where the olympics will be held, run by the Russian Mafia.

  • BC Boy

    1 year ago

    We're all warriors with class

    Check tongue, firmly planted in cheek.....

    "It was a jab at the the class warriors, BC Boy. I have lived in a military dictatorship and in more than one third world country. I count myself very lucky to live in Canada."

    Would have otherwise from the comment from the poster.

    "Still, I want Eby to go the Sochi and see how long he lasts there...."

    With the more strict police presence in Russia and overall faceless toughness of their police, I doubt
    Eby and the Olympic Resistance Network would not last very long. Sochi is evolving (amongst the potential problems of doing too much too fast) as a point of Russian Federation showing itself on the world stage.

    It would be good for Eby to go over there and experiment as to how far he can place his silly
    notions of "Legal Observers" who obviously only look one way.

  • RickW

    1 year ago

    I still don't understand......

    ....why Gordo didn't use this technology for the games here:
    http://www.pastpeak.com/archives/2006/01/skiing_in_the_d_1.htm
    Perhaps Sochi will pick up on this..........

  • MacKenna

    1 year ago

    This speaks volumes about the IOC

    Granting the games to what is essentially a totalitarian thuggish regime that thinks nothing of bulldozing homes and forcibly moving residents to accommodate a five ring circus, speaks volumes about the motivations of the IOC, but I'm sure that corrupt organization will spin it as "bringing democracy to the East."

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