Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Corpses, excrement, litter: welcome to Rio Olympic sailing venue

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RIO DE JANEIRO, JULY 31,

2016 (AFP) - When Olympic sailors compete in Rio the cameras will show a made-for-television scene of sparkling tropical waters and mountains. Luckily, the billions of viewers won’t catch the revolting stink.

More than nine million people live in Rio and towns around the rest of Guanabara Bay. At best only half the sewage they produce is treated before it pours into the city’s watery heart.

Incredibly, the fact that sailors will compete in a giant cesspit -- which Brazilian researcher­s say contains drug-resistant superbacte­ria -- is not their main worry.

It’s the big, floating stuff capable of snaring or even damaging boats and medal dreams that keep athletes like Kahena Kunze and her 49er crewmate Martine Grael up at night. Because garbage collection in greater Rio is no better than the sewage treatment, the bay brims with plastic bags, bottles, discarded furniture and dead animals.

The New York Times published a picture this week of a bloated human body in the bay. Another body part washed up on Copacabana beach, just outside Guanabara, in June. “It’s shameful,” Kunze told AFP. As part of its winning 2009 bid to

Incredibly, the fact that sailors will compete in a giant cesspit -- which Brazilian researcher­s say contains drug-resistant superbacte­ria -- is not their main worry

host the Olympics, Rio promised to treat 80 percent of the pollution, a task requiring enormous, expensive infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts.

Having completely failed to deliver, Rio opted for emergency measures.

A fleet of 12 trash-collecting boats called “eco-barcos” have spent months patrolling the bay, plucking an average of 45 tons of rubbish a month -- about one and a half tons daily -- from the water, according to officials.

When the races start, the floating garbage collectors will be out in force.

The first lines of defense, though, are so-called eco-barriers. These are nets placed across 17 rivers entering Guanabara -- rivers used by millions of people as garbage dumps and open sewers.

At a an eco-barrier on the River Meriti in the Duque de Caxias neighborho­od, there was a soup of plastic, car tires, children’s toys and household appliances including a microwave and a fridge.

Each day, laborers go out in a small aluminum boat, scooping up some pieces and pushing the rest towards the bank, where a digger is used to shovel the debris into a dumpster.

 ??  ?? A man walks along the shoreline of the polluted waters of Rio de Janeiro's Guanabara Bay, venue for some of the 2016 Olympic sailing events.
A man walks along the shoreline of the polluted waters of Rio de Janeiro's Guanabara Bay, venue for some of the 2016 Olympic sailing events.

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