The Korea Times

Olympic opening ceremony could move from Seine to stadium: Macron

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PARIS (AFP) — French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday for the first time that the Paris Olympics’ opening ceremony could move from the river Seine to the national stadium in the event of a security threat.

Macron said instead of teams sailing down the Seine on barges, the ceremony could be “limited to the Trocadero” building across the river from the Eiffel Tower or “even moved to the Stade de France.”

The Paris organizers have devised a ceremony that is unpreceden­ted in Olympic history as it breaks from the tradition of the Games opening in the main stadium.

The plans would see as many as 10,000 athletes sailing along a six-kilometer stretch of the Seine in around 160 barges, before gathering at the Trocadero for a ceremony.

But with war raging in Ukraine and in Gaza, the ceremony also leaves teams potentiall­y vulnerable to attack — French authoritie­s have, for example, mentioned the possibilit­y of an attack launched by drones.

So far, organizers have denied the ceremony on July 26 could be moved to a different venue if authoritie­s believe there is a possibilit­y it will be targeted.

“This opening ceremony… is a world first. We can do it and we are going to do it,” Macron said in an interview with BFMTV and RMC.

“We have put in place a security cordon which is going to be very big, where we are going to check all the people coming in and going out,” Macron said.

But, he added, “there are Plan Bs and Plan Cs, we are preparing them in parallel… We will analyze this in real time”.

The backup plans include moving the ceremony to the Stade de France to the north of Paris, the main stadium for the Olympics where the rugby sevens and athletics will be held.

Moving the ceremony from the Seine would be a huge undertakin­g and would deprive the Paris Olympics of their defining image.

If the ceremony is moved to the Stade de France, it would be purely ceremonial without an artistic show, according to sources with knowledge of the arrangemen­ts.

More than 300,000 spectators are expected to be present for the ceremony, with another 200,000 watching from buildings along the Seine.

So far, all countries have said they plan to take part in the open-air river parade, including

“There are Plan Bs and Plan Cs, we are preparing them in parallel. ”

the most risk-averse such as the United States and Israel.

The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) said on Monday it was not surprised that Macron had spoken of contingenc­y plans for the ceremony.

“I think any leader has a plan A, B and C, at least in the back of their mind,” USOPC chief executive Sarah Hirshland told AFP at a US team media event in New York.

“But there’s no leader who relies on a single plan at any time. No, I wasn’t surprised.”

Olympic truce

Macron also said he would do “everything possible” to have an Olympic truce during the Games. The truce is an historic tradition that peace reigns during the Olympics.

“We want to work towards an Olympic truce and I think it is an occasion for me to engage with a lot of our partners,” he said. He said he would ask the Chinese president to help him in that aim when he visits Paris in early May.

“I have asked Xi Jinping to help me,” Macron said.

The Paralympic­s take place after the Olympics, beginning on August 28.

The president admitted the Paris metro system was not accessible to wheelchair users, which could pose difficulti­es for spectators at the Paralympic­s.

Macron admitted that on many of the older metro lines there was “not enough” accessibil­ity.

He said to compensate, 1,000 taxis with wheelchair access would be made available for the duration of the Paralympic­s.

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