Beijing Review

GROOMED FOR OLYMPIC SUCCESS

Intensive training is paying off for volunteers

- By Li Xiaoyang

Asa teenager, Temelidi Yulia watched the Olympic Winter Games Sochi 2014 on TV at home in Russia. Now, a sophomore student at Tsinghua University’s School of Social Sciences in Beijing, her wish to be involved in the Winter Olympics has come true, as she is volunteeri­ng for the Beijing 2022 Games as a protocol assistant in the internatio­nal liaison team at the National Stadium, also known as the Bird’s Nest. She and her colleagues began work at the stadium on January 30.

According to the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, the recruitmen­t of volunteers for the Games was completed in October 2021. Some 19,000 volunteers are serving in the three competitio­n zones, respective­ly in downtown Beijing and its suburban district of Yanqing, as well as in Zhangjiako­u, a city in neighborin­g Hebei Province. They carry out activities such as translatio­n and communicat­ion, informatio­n management, and COVID-19 prevention.

China bonds

In 2012, Yulia came to China with her parents. “My mother is Chinese and I developed an interest in

Chinese culture at an early age, so I decided to come to China for further education and plan to work in China-Russia trade in the future,” she told Beijing Review.

“I used to be worried about being alone, and about not doing well in my studies because of cultural difference­s, but I actually don’t feel like to be an outsider, and have learned to be open to people with different background­s,” Yulia said.

This is the first time Yulia has worked as a volunteer for an internatio­nal event. Yulia applied as soon as recruitmen­t of Olympic volunteers began in April 2021. Able to speak Russian,

Chinese and English, she was recruited and received three months of training. According to Yulia, the training focused on etiquette and procedures for receiving internatio­nal athletes and guests. They will work eight hours a day until the end of the Olympics on February 20, and then during the Paralympic­s, from March 4 to 13.

While the language barrier doesn’t present a problem for Yulia, she believes her role brings

a number of challenges and requires a great deal of knowledge and coordinati­on.

Given the lingering COVID-19 pandemic, the Games take place in a closed-loop management system that separates participan­ts from the general population. This system covers all Olympic venues with those involved transporte­d in dedicated vehicles.

The biggest challenge is to enforce COVID-19 containmen­t measures inside competitio­n zones to keep athletes, volunteers and other personnel safe. It’s difficult, but China’s measures have been effective, Yulia said.

Profession­als

Also a volunteer at the Games, Duan Yuyu, a senior student at Tsinghua University’s School of Aerospace Engineerin­g, works as an anti-doping chaperone at the National Sliding Center in Yanqing.

Since March 2018, the China

Anti-Doping Agency (CHINADA) has completed over 7,000 doping tests covering all the athletes in preparatio­ns for the 2022 Games. According to the agency, there have been no positive tests among these athletes over the past two years. At this year’s Games, dried blood spot testing is being used. The testing involves the drawing of a small volume of blood, which is then dried on filter paper, so that the sample is easy to transport, and can be stored for up to 10 years.

China is one of the developers of this innovative anti-doping method and the relevant equipment. The testing has been implemente­d by CHINADA for all of China’s Olympic programs, including 400 samples collected before the Tokyo Summer Games and 300 in the leadup to the Beijing 2022 Games.

Duan told Beijing Review that after being recruited, she and other team members took online courses from the Internatio­nal Testing Agency, and participat­ed in multiple drills and practices in 2021. Last April, she served as a doping control chaperone in a curling test event held at the National Aquatics Center in Beijing.

“Our work includes responding to athletes who require doping tests, notifying them, and accompanyi­ng them to the doping control station. In addition to general training, we received a great deal of specialize­d training, including notificati­on procedures and wording, and how to cope with emergencie­s,” she told Beijing Review.

The chaperones had taken part in several simulation drills before taking up t heir posts on January 26. According to Duan, the doping control supervisor­s created diverse scenarios such as athletes getting hurt or refusing to get tested. During the drills, volunteers were required to practice managing these situations in English.

As the volunteer chaperones are required to communicat­e with athletes face to face, they are undertakin­g stringent COVID-19 prevention measures. They wear tight-fitting N95 masks and disposable gloves when communicat­ing with athletes. They also undergo a disinfecti­on procedure after each close contact with an athlete.

This is the first ti me Duan spent Spring Festival working instead of being with her family, as the 2022 Games coincides with the Chinese New Year holiday. On t he morning of January 31, Chinese New Year’s Eve, Duan and the other volunteers participat­ed in two drills. All of them then spent t he festival t ogether in hotels inside the competitio­n zones, where Olympic organizers hosted several activities.

“I have witnessed the great efforts and devotion of everyone working behind the scenes. It is my wish to complete the task smoothly despite the pandemic,” Duan said.

 ?? ?? Temelidi Yulia (second left) at work
Temelidi Yulia (second left) at work
 ?? ?? Duan Yuyu at the National Sliding Center in Yanqing District, Beijing, on February 1
Duan Yuyu at the National Sliding Center in Yanqing District, Beijing, on February 1

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