Sunday News

Olympics prove bitter pill for Rio to take

- LAURA MCQUILLAN

‘ It's a disaster. Tourists are screwed.’

OPINION: ‘‘It’s good for Rio. But it’s bad for the people,’’ my doorman tells me, when I ask how he feels about the Olympics.

His thoughts echo those of nearly every Brazilian I’ve spoken to about next month’s Games.

They’re happy the city’s getting overdue infrastruc­ture updates – notably, public transport and some improvemen­t to the heavily-polluted bay.

But many feel excluded from a costly mega-event being forced down their throats, tied to demolition of homes and political corruption, at a time when the country can least afford it.

Finding any sign of preOlympic excitement is still a challenge, although Rio 2016’s presi- dent Carlos Nuzman assures me ’’the excitement is very big’’.

Yet a poll by Rio daily newspaper O Globo puts public support for the Games at 49 per cent – that’s a 10 per cent drop from two years ago.

And while 61 per cent of residents believe the Games will be a success, 85 per cent believe a lack of security could make them a failure.

‘‘It’s a mixed situation,’’ a woman told me on the beach. ‘‘But I think there’s more bad than good, especially for the poor.’’

As we spoke, protesters were demonstrat­ing in the city centre. Their message: ‘‘Olympics for whom?’’

Two weeks ago, Rio de Janeiro state declared a ‘‘state of calamity’’ – warning of a ‘‘total collapse’’ of public services, from hospitals to security. Police, REUTERS teachers and pensioners haven’t received payments in months.

Cops are protesting in the city’s internatio­nal airport, with one banner reading ‘‘Welcome to hell. Police and firefighte­rs don’t get paid, whoever comes to Rio de Janeiro will not be safe.’’

Rio will be ready for the Games, a taxi driver told me, ‘‘but it won’t be safe.’’

My Uber driver was more blunt: ‘‘It’s a disaster. Tourists are screwed.’’

A whopping R$2.9 billion (NZ$1.2 billion) loan from Brazil’s government has just been agreed, in order to fund security measures – and backpay police.

That’ll be a relief to Rio’s acting governor, Francisco Dornelles, who warned without urgent security measures andwork to get a new metro line ready, the Games ‘‘could be a big failure’’.

The Olympic spend has left a sour taste with Brazilians ticked off about their country’s snowballin­g corruption scandal, with the president facing an impeachmen­t trial. .

When August hits, bringing with it a month of school holidays, three extra public holidays, the Olympic torch, thousands of athletes and half a million visitors, the excitement will build and the complaints will quieten down – just as they did before the World Cup in 2014.

But for now, even those who’ve forked out for tickets to the oncein-a-lifetime event have their reservatio­ns about how the Games might come off.

‘‘It is out of our league,’’ a lawyer, who will take his family to several events, told me.

He said he expected a ‘‘fun, loud’’ atmosphere in the stands, but added: ’’If Greece couldn’t pull it off, why could we?’’

 ??  ?? Soldiers at Olympic Park.
Soldiers at Olympic Park.

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