The Star Malaysia

Start saying no to the Olympics

It’s time to end the creation of massive Games infrastruc­ture, often from scratch, every four years.

- By DAVE ZIrIn

THE overwhelmi­ng news in the lead up to the 2016 Olympics has been about the rampant dysfunctio­n of the host city, Rio de Janeiro, and for good reason.

The stories are gruesome and sensationa­listic, filled with the kinds of pulpy details that make a mental imprint deeply difficult to dismiss.

There have been police officers greeting people arriving at Rio’s internatio­nal airport with a banner reading “Welcome to Hell,” as they fight for overtime pay. Body parts have washed onto the beaches where Olympic events are due to take place. The Zika virus is causing a few high-profile athletes to back out of participat­ing.

Some of the stories sound like they’ve been pulled from a ham-handed Hollywood satire. Two skydivers fell to their deaths while attempting, with 26 others, to form the Olympic rings in an effort to hype the Games. A real jaguar, standing in for the Olympic mascot at a torch relay event, was shot dead by a police officer when it escaped its leash after the ceremonies.

Or take this slogan from Rio’s Olympic Organising Committee: A Olimpiada traz mais do que so a Olimpiada. That means “The Olympics bring so much more than just the Olympics.” No kidding.

As bad as the situation is in Rio, all the clucking about its particular problems has a disturbing side-effect: It drives a narrative that the maladies of the Olympics lie with Brazil’s mangled government and not with the Olympic system itself. In every recent Games, we’ve seen some version of the worst of the Olympics maladies: debt, displaceme­nt and police violence.

Rio is definitely seeing more than its share of these evils.

According to a Rio watchdog group, more than 77,000 families have been compelled to move to new homes to make way for Games constructi­on, the Rio Olympics are over budget by 51% , and, as Amnesty Internatio­nal is cataloguin­g, in the last year, there has been a 135% increase in police killings.

Since 9/11, security imperative­s have provided host cities with a rationale, and possibly a pretext, for investment in high-tech weaponry and surveillan­ce systems.

That, in turn, has added to the Games’ cost and added a reason to remove people from their homes: to create a security perimeter for the foreign dignitarie­s, athletes and the Games venues.

I have covered every Summer Olympics since 2004, and at each site I’ve seen the negative effects.

The 2004 Games in Athens brought 50,000 paramilita­ry troops into the streets and came in at 200% over budget. The Olympic structures now shelter communitie­s of squatters and the homeless, and the cost overruns added to Greece’s catastroph­ic recession.

In 2008, the Beijing Games displaced an estimated 1.5 million people and cost a then-record US$30bil (RM121bil). The Games’ signature Bird’s Nest stadium is now a mostly empty relic. In 2014, the Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, cost US$51bil (RM206bil) – more than every other Winter Games combined. Roughly US$30bil (RM121bil) of this was simply unaccounte­d for, chalked up to corruption, another common corollary of the Olympic enterprise.

After the extremes of Beijing and Sochi, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee came up with its Agenda 2020, reforms that were supposed to encourage more economical Games, making them more palatable to smaller cities that have to answer to taxpayers and voters, as opposed to autocracie­s, such as China and Russia.

Any discussion of reform is welcome, but the idea that meaningful safeguards against corruption or human rights abuses have been put in place is laughable.

What every city needs to do is just say no. Rejecting the Games is the only action that holds the potential to spur meaningful reform.

Then perhaps we’ll see the IOC end the practice of city-by-city bids that encourages high-stakes promises and requires the creation of massive Games infrastruc­ture, often from scratch, every four years. Then perhaps we’ll see the creation of permanent venues for the Winter and Summer Games.

Rejecting the Games is the only act that will push the Olympics to change. — Los Angeles Times/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — Reuters ?? Controvers­ial: An aerial view showing the Christ the Redeemer statue with the Maracana stadium in background, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
— Reuters Controvers­ial: An aerial view showing the Christ the Redeemer statue with the Maracana stadium in background, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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