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Canadian officials add voice to chorus of conce

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Canadian officials add voice to chorus of concerns around Commonwealth Games


World | 206675 hits | Sep 21 11:13 pm | Posted by: Hyack
19 Comment

Canadian officials joined a chorus of concern over the atrocious conditions at the athletes village for the imminent Commonwealth Games in New Delhi. The clock is ticking with Canadian athletes scheduled to begin arriving in just three days for the Oct. 3

Comments

  1. by avatar martin14
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 8:16 am
    Nice list of things going wrong.

    I'm not sure we should be sending our team.

  2. by avatar bootlegga
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:04 pm
    NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India scrambled against the clock to save the Commonwealth Games after big ticket athletes quit the showcase event and nations threatened to stay home unless authorities cleaned venues "unfit for human habitation."

    Scotland delayed its departure to New Delhi and Wales gave organizers until later on Wednesday to guarantee that the venues and athletes' village are safe. The New Zealand swimming team is seeking a "Plan B" should the event be canceled.


    Commonwealth Games Federation president Michael Fennell, who said the two-week event suffered from filthy conditions, will arrive on Thursday for a probable meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

    In the next few days thousands of athletes will start arriving for the October 3 start.

    India had hoped to use the $6 billion Games, held every four years for members of the former British Empire, as a display of its growing global economic and political clout rivaling China.

    Instead, the Games have descended into farce with some countries giving organizers an ultimatum of a few days to get everything ready or face the prospect of national withdrawals from an event which is so far only showcasing Indian traveler-tale cliches of filth, chaos and corruption.

    "Officials found that building works had fallen seriously behind schedule and that its allocated accommodation blocks were far from finished and in their view, unsafe and unfit for human habitation," Team Scotland said in a statement.

    A portion of false ceiling in the weightlifting venue caved in on Wednesday, a day after the collapse of a footbridge by the main stadium injured 27 workers, highlighting the problems facing organizers as they race to complete work.

    Nobody was injured at the weightlifting venue.

    "There have been dogs roaming around the village, the apartments are filthy, there are piles of rubble and right now it's not fit to receive 6,500 athletes and officials," Michael Cavanagh, chairman of Commonwealth Games Scotland, told the BBC.

    "National Shame" was the headline in one Indian newspaper.

    New Zealand's swimming team left today for Abu Dhabi, with an official saying another competition was in the pipeline if the Games are canceled. Australian and Canadian squads are in Singapore and the British in Doha, suggesting another Asian meet could be hastily organized.

    There have been reports of stray dogs, stagnant water, workers urinating in public, and human feces being found at the unfinished village where the athletes will live.

    Stagnant pools of water, breeding grounds for dengue mosquitoes, lie around and a Reuters reporter said homeless people were living outside the main stadium.


    Indian government officials say the problems, including the roof collapse on Wednesday, are mostly minor glitches and the Games will be a success.

    But criticism is mounting even within India, where the country's leadership is seen as out-of-touch and having failed to understand what is expected of a nation which is not short of funds nor skilled labor to host a major sporting event.

    It also highlights concerns about how India will effectively spend some $1.5 trillion on infrastructure over the next decade which is fundamental to managing fast economic growth and a growing population of 1.2 billion.

    DENGUE EPIDEMIC, SECURITY LAPSES

    World discus champion Dani Samuels of Australia pulled out of the Games because of security and health concerns, as did England's world triple jump champion Phillips Idowu.

    Four other champions have quit for various reasons, including injuries, in the last 24 hours.

    "Sorry people, but I have children to think about. My safety is more important to them than a medal," Idowu wrote on his Twitter feed.

    Triple Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica is the highest profile athlete to skip the event.

    An epidemic of Dengue, in part blamed on stagnant water around unfinished construction sites, has hit Delhi and thousands of people are being treated in hospital.

    Many residents are fleeing Delhi during the Games, worried about security and traffic chaos.

    Only days after two foreign visitors were shot and wounded by unknown assailants in Delhi, Australian TV broadcast how a reporter bought bomb making devices to smuggle through security points. Indian police denied he ever crossed a checkpoint.

    Highlighting how the Games has become a political minefield for a government already reeling under high inflation, officials from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's office toured the village.

    "The prime minister is of course extremely concerned," Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar, who is overseeing the preparations, told CNN-IBN.

    So far 77-year-old Singh, who took charge of monitoring the preparations a month ago after criticism of missed deadlines, has remained silent, underscoring what critics say is his out-of-touch leadership.

    Sporting power Australia backed the Commonwealth Games on Wednesday and many venues, including the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, have been praised as world-class.

    Officials note that other events, such as the 2004 Athens Olympics, were dogged by problems but turned out fine.

    However, Canada's Games team said it might delay the arrival of some of its athletes if adequate accommodation was not available.

    New Zealand Olympic Committee officials have arrived in Delhi to inspect facilities and security.

    "I think if the Commonwealth Games didn't go ahead, that could have significant implications for the future of the Commonwealth Games, and that's not something we'd like to see," New Zealand Prime Minister John Key told reporters.

    Indian officials defended their record.

    "Please try to understand ... They want certain standards of hygiene, they want certain standards of cleanliness, which may differ from my standard," said Lalit Bhanot, spokesman of the Delhi organizing committee.



    http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/reuters/1009 ... s_games_10

  3. by avatar Zipperfish  Gold Member
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:16 pm
    "Dis is belly belly bad"

  4. by avatar EyeBrock
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:23 pm
    Really, who cares about the Commonwealth besides the Brits?

    This stuff is way past it's shelf life.

  5. by IGA
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:59 pm
    The sooner that Canada gets out of the commonwealth the better. There is no relevance to the commonwealth anymore. There are no special ties between Canada and any commonwealth country. Hell, Germans and Italians have more rights in the UK than Canadians or Australians. All the commonwealth does is cost us money. :rock:

  6. by avatar BartSimpson  Gold Member
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:06 pm
    "EyeBrock" said
    Really, who cares about the Commonwealth besides the Brits?


    Funny, the professor I worked for as a grad student back in 1983-84, Dr. Gerald G. Smith (Syracuse University), had one of the few Ph.D's on the British Commonwealth of Nations. It was rather exciting to answer calls for him from all over the world and it left me with the impression that the Commonwealth was pretty important to a number of people.

  7. by avatar JayRoc
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:29 pm
    Pull Out!






























    Easy...right?

  8. by avatar EyeBrock
    Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:52 pm
    "BartSimpson" said
    Really, who cares about the Commonwealth besides the Brits?


    Funny, the professor I worked for as a grad student back in 1983-84, Dr. Gerald G. Smith (Syracuse University), had one of the few Ph.D's on the British Commonwealth of Nations. It was rather exciting to answer calls for him from all over the world and it left me with the impression that the Commonwealth was pretty important to a number of people.


    Those days have gone mate.

    The Brits don't really care about the old Empire or the Commonwealth and the favour is returned.

    Most people in Canada don't care about their British heritage anyway. I don't see the point in trying to support something that no longer matters to most.

  9. by avatar Scape
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 12:09 am
    Hey Jay long time no see!


    Canada delays sending athletes, archers pull out

    I say we pull pin on the whole ex.

    India clearly can't get their shit together.

  10. by avatar ShepherdsDog
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:13 am
    They want certain standards of hygiene, they want certain standards of cleanliness, which may differ from my standard," said Lalit Bhanot, spokesman of the Delhi organizing committee.


    This is wwhere the major problem lays. Third World standards(India's) aren't sufficient. Living in filth and squalor may be acceptable to them, but it isn't to others.


    One of Canada's best and a world class archer, Dietmar Trillus had this to say about his choice to not participate in New Delhi:

    Trillus said his decision to bow out of the Commonwealth Games, which he reached after consulting with his wife, was based on several concerns — including health, security and the quality of accommodations.

    "I've got from several sources that the athletes village is far from finished and extremely unsanitary, the food is iffy at best" Trillus said. "But what really concerns me the absolute most is the diseases that are running very rampant right now due to the monsoons, as well as the terrorism threats, which are apparently a very, very real thing.


    another archer, Kevin Tataryn, who is also pulling out had this to say:


    "All we've been told from our Canadian Commonwealth Games Committee is, 'Just wait, and it'll get better.' But from what I'm reading, that doesn't seem to be the case," he said.

    "I made my own decision … because I don't think we're getting told the full story from our Commonwealth Games Committee advisors."

    Tataryn may be in a better position than most to make that decision. He works as a materials technician for an engineering firm, and he doesn't see how Delhi workers can complete the village in the next few days.
    "I think it would be a longshot for them to get it done," Tataryn said.

  11. by avatar PublicAnimalNo9
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:40 am
    "ShepherdsDog" said

    Tataryn may be in a better position than most to make that decision. He works as a materials technician for an engineering firm, and he doesn't see how Delhi workers can complete the village in the next few days.
    "I think it would be a longshot for them to get it done," Tataryn said.

    A longshot? I don't think Vegas would even touch those odds :lol:

  12. by avatar ShepherdsDog
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:01 am
    I am tinking dat you are wedy disrespectful, being of India. Our standards are meeting ewryting above and beyond local standards. In Fact, ve good easily meet exacting British standards...of the 13th century.

  13. by avatar PublicAnimalNo9
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:04 am
    "ShepherdsDog" said
    I am tinking dat you are wedy disrespectful, being of India. Our standards are meeting ewrything above and beyond local standards. In Fact, ve good easily meet the exacting British standards...of the 13th century.

    ROTFL The accent is great :lol:

  14. by avatar stratos
    Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:34 am
    "ShepherdsDog" said
    I am tinking dat you are wedy disrespectful, being of India. Our standards are meeting ewryting above and beyond local standards. In Fact, ve good easily meet exacting British standards...of the 13th century.


    OMG I thought you were some over the phone service rep. 8O



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