The Mercury News Weekend

Brazil bike path collapse kills two

Seaside route, recently opened, was part of Olympic renovation­s

- By Flipe Dana and Renata Brito

RIO DE JANEIRO — A new elevated bike path that was heralded as a top legacy project of the Rio de Janeiro Olympics collapsed Thursday, killing at least two people.

The accident on the Tim Maia bike path was the latest in a series of problems besetting preparatio­ns for the Aug. 5-21 games, which include worries about an outbreak of the Zika virus, political turmoil that threatens to topple President Dilma Rousseff, underwhelm­ing ticket sales and budget cuts amid Brazil’s worst recession in decades.

Municipal Secretary Pedro Paulo Carvalho said a third person was thought to be missing after a giant wave apparently swept up a rocky cliff, lifted an approximat­ely 150-foot stretch of the bike path and sent it plunging onto the rocks and sea below.

Rio’s fire department confirmed only the two deaths. Local news media said two other people were rescued alive.

Helicopter­s fished the two who died out of the water and laid them out on the golden sands of Sao Conrado beach. Initially covered by colorful beach sarongs, they were later shrouded by a sheet of black plastic.

The bodies were left on the sand for hours, and waves periodical­ly washed over them.

A crowd of beachgoers gathered around the corpses, while others continued a game of beach soccer nearby. Thursday was a public holiday in Brazil, and with the weather sunny and warm, the city’s bike paths, beaches and other outdoor recreation­al spots were packed.

Joao Ricardo Tinoco identified one of the victims as his brother-in-law, Eduardo Marinho Albuquerqu­e.

He said the 54-yearold father of one was out jogging at the time of the accident. Tinoco’s sister, Eliane, kneeled over his body, kissing his face and begging to be given another moment to “say goodbye.”

Carvalho said it was too early to tell what caused the accident and said an in- vestigatio­n was underway.

Shoddy constructi­on is a perennial problem in Brazil, where graft is a fixture of many constructi­on projects.

“It’s clear that an accident like this is unpardonab­le,” Carvalho told the Globo television network.

The entire 2.5-mile bike path, which links the tony beachfront neighborho­ods of Sao Conrado and Leblon, is now closed, he said.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE SIMONCHRIS­TOPHE SIMON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Two people were killed Thursday when the recently inaugurate­d bicycle track collapsed in Rio de Janeiro.
CHRISTOPHE SIMONCHRIS­TOPHE SIMON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Two people were killed Thursday when the recently inaugurate­d bicycle track collapsed in Rio de Janeiro.

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