The Daily Telegraph

Four people barred from Games over terrorism links

- By Donna Bowater in Rio de Janeiro

FOUR suspects with known links to terrorism have attempted to travel to Brazil for the Rio 2016 Olympics, it has emerged.

The four, whose identities have not been revealed, applied for accreditat­ion for the Games and were among the 11,000 to be denied on security grounds, according to the Brazilian authoritie­s. They featured on a list of 40 who are subject to internatio­nal alerts and are being monitored by intelligen­ce agencies.

Brazilian authoritie­s have formed an Integrated Anti-Terrorism Centre (Ciant) for the Olympics and are working with security agencies from the US, UK, France, Spain, Belgium, Paraguay and Argentina.

“We did a scan on all national databases and also, in the spirit of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, a trace of informatio­n with these global partners,” Andrei Augusto Passos Rodrigues, national security coordinato­r for Rio 2016, told television magazine show Fantástico on Sunday night.

“Approximat­ely 460,000 inspection­s were done and of these, around 11,000 were not recommende­d for accreditat­ion.”

There were also more than 60 Brazilians with active warrants who applied for accreditat­ion for the Olympics, Mr Rodrigues added.

Accreditat­ion for the Games is required for all media, VIPs, officials, athletes and other staff who require access to restricted areas and also acts as a visa for entry to Brazil. Authoritie­s did not say in what capacity the four suspects had applied nor from which country.

Officers at the Ciant centre, which is headquarte­red in the capital, Brasília, are monitoring Rio 24 hours a day.

Among the areas covered are hotels where Olympic officials and VIPs will stay, Games venues and training sites.

On Friday, Brazilian authoritie­s deported a Franco-Algerian particle physicist who had been convicted of terrorrela­ted crimes and was working as a visiting professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

Cristiano Sampaio, general coordinato­r for public security at the Games, said there was no identified threat of a terror attack against Brazil but said the level of alert had been raised since the Bastille Day attack in Nice.

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