Ottawa Citizen

Olympic city already tightening security net

Sochi to ramp up measures after Boston bombings

- NATALIYA VASILYEVA

MOSCOW The naming of two Chechen brothers as the suspects in the deadly Boston Marathon bombing is reviving fears about security at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, the resort town on the edge of Russia’s restive southern republics. But officials insist they are prepared to protect Olympic athletes and spectators.

If anything, experts said, the bombings could convince the United States to work more with Russia on security at the games, with the country motivated to lend a hand in hopes of ensuring security for its own citizens.

There is no demonstrab­le connection between the Chechen insurgency and the suspects in the Boston bombings, one of whom was killed in a shootout and the other the focus of an intense manhunt. But Russia has for years been trying to convince the world how big a threat it faces.

Even as regional leaders in Chechnya boast about successful efforts at eradicatin­g the insurgency, it has spread into the rest of the Caucasus and brought terror to Moscow and other cities. Russian authoritie­s have sometimes responded with tough measures that left dozens dead.

The Sochi Organizing Committee on Friday refused to comment on how the Boston attacks could affect preparatio­ns for the Games, though one official earlier this week promised “the safest in history.” Olympic officials expressed confidence Friday in Russian measures.

The Olympics are “the most secure place you can find,” said Gian Franco Kasper, president of the internatio­nal ski federation FIS, and a member of the IOC’s co-ordination commission for Sochi.

“We always know how tight the security is in Russia now,” he said. “They are relatively nervous for the games, which is correct because of the surroundin­g countries.”

The Boston attacks might actually boost security at Sochi because the United States would now be more motivated to engage in Russia to ensure security for Americans, one expert said.

“The U.S. intelligen­ce agencies would be more interested now in expanding cooperatio­n, which has hardly existed until now,” said Andrei Soldatov, a Russian journalist and security expert.

U.S. Olympic Committee spokesman Patrick Sandusky told the AP that the committee “will work closely with the local organizing committee, our State Department and law enforcemen­t agencies to ensure the proper security plan is in place.”

Chechen separatist­s have fought two full-scale wars with Russian forces, but despite President Vladimir Putin’s sanction of the violent rule of his chosen Chechen leader, he has been unable to stop the spread of the Islamic insurgency.

In 2002, Chechen suicide bombers and others seized a Moscow theatre and some 850 hostages, a siege that ended with 129 hostages and all 41 hostage-takers dead when Russian forces staged a rescue raid after first filling the auditorium with a narcotic gas to knock out the militants.

Chechen insurgents also launched a 2004 hostage-taking raid in the southern Russian town of Beslan, a siege that ended in a bloodbath two days later, with more than 330 people, about half of them children, killed. A suicide bomber killed 37 people at Moscow’s busiest airport in 2011, prompting threats of revenge by Putin.

But officials say the security plan for Sochi meets internatio­nal demands and that the system’s efficiency has been proven at test competitio­ns.

Security precaution­s were high and visible to outsiders at internatio­nal test events in Sochi in January and February.

Some athletes were bemused by what they described as unpreceden­ted security measures, including patrols of guards with assault rifles as well as incessant checks of credential­s.

Kasper told the AP he was amazed by how tight the security was in Sochi during the test events.

“I joked that the only moment they didn’t inspect our athletes was during the race,” he said. “We can be relatively safe with all the controls. I am not worried about it.”

 ?? ARTUR LEBEDEV/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A police officer with a sniffer dog and security guards check a bus entering the Olympic Park in Sochi. Russian sports officials said this week they will beef up security.
ARTUR LEBEDEV/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A police officer with a sniffer dog and security guards check a bus entering the Olympic Park in Sochi. Russian sports officials said this week they will beef up security.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada