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The Sochi 2014 Winter Games are threatened by a looming
international boycott, environmental concerns, and public protests
against local development.
Here,
amid the breathtaking mountain vistas of Europe's last slice of
untouched alpine wilderness, the state gas monopoly Gazprom has nearly
completed a huge new ultramodern ski base. Nearby, other big Russian
corporations have been hastily building roads, hotels, Olympic sports
facilities, and a press center to meet the Kremlin's timetable for the
Sochi 2014 Winter Games.
Winning the bid for Sochi against stiff
international competition a year ago was one of Vladimir Putin's
crowning achievements as Russian president. But supervising the
increasingly troubled preparations for the Games may be one of his
biggest challenges as he settles into his new role as prime minister.
"Putin
has made the Olympics his most important principle, and I'm sure he
will never back down, whatever the problems," says Boris Nemtsov, a
Sochi-born former deputy prime minister. "But the whole enterprise is
in danger of turning into a black hole. There is no transparency in the
way the money's being spent, corruption is rampant, and it's making
Sochi too expensive for most people to live in."
Glitches
include environmental hazards, looming cost overruns, citizens'
protests, and a threatened international boycott of the Olympics led by
Georgia over Russia's backing for Abkhazia.
Soviet-era roads and buildings
Sochi
is built on a narrow, subtropical strip of lush beachfront wedged
between the towering Caucasus mountains and the Black Sea. Yet for all
its natural advantages, the city is hobbled by transportation
bottlenecks. One narrow mountain road and a single-track railroad are
all that connects Sochi to the rest of Russia. The city's only
thoroughfare, Kurortny Prospekt, is often paralyzed with traffic jams.
Moreover, the city's antiquated seaport cannot receive oceangoing
ships. In a recent speech, Mr. Putin complained that Sochi's sewage
system needs rebuilding.
"The infrastructural challenges facing
us are immense, we know that," says Alexei Malkov, head of the city
government's information department.
But one of the political
storms the Kremlin is trying to weather as it transforms underdeveloped
Sochi into a world-class venue is an outcry by ecologists over rapid
development in the formerly pristine mountain region.
A decision
taken last week by Putin to move several Olympic installations may
force some developers to go back to the drawing boards. "In determining
our priorities – money or the environment – we chose the environment,"
Putin told a meeting of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in
Sochi last week.
Among the sites that will need to be moved, he
said, are a bobsled run that cuts close to a UNESCO-protected nature
reserve, an athlete village, a road, and a water-extraction plant.
Local environmentalists say they're pleased with Putin's choice, but
add that more installations need to be moved further from the fragile
Grushevy Ridge. "We hope the government will move all the Olympic
[infrastructure] from that area, or these concessions will be just half
measures," says Dmitri Kaptsov, spokesman for the Caucasus Ecological
Wave, an environmental group.
Local outcry over rising prices
While
environmentalists got a boost from Putin's announcement, there is
palpable unrest among residents about the skyrocketing prices they
claim have been triggered by an influx of Olympics-inspired
speculators. Some fear their homes and livelihoods may be taken to make
way for Olympic developments.
"When the authorities start an
operation like this, they seldom take the interests of ordinary people
into account," says Olga Miryasova, spokesperson for Autonomous Action,
an anti-Olympic group that has staged several public protests in Sochi.
"These Games are a political event to raise the country's prestige, but
there are too many poor people to warrant these huge expenditures."
City
officials insist that very few people will be displaced by Olympic
constructions and those that are will be properly compensated. But
trouble is already brewing on the site of the future Olympic Park,
where a community of about 600 Old Believers, an Orthodox religious
sect, are defying orders to leave their coastal village of
Imeretinskaya Bukhta. "The authorities have told us we'll be arrested
and our homes destroyed by bulldozers," says Dmitry Drofichev, a
spokesman for the group. "But we are not going to give in. We'll fight".
Small-business
owners add that their interests are also being brushed aside. "Big
companies buying up property have driven land prices up fivefold in the
past two years, which is a huge obstacle to any small entrepreneur,"
says Arsen Sadatierov, owner of a cafe in downtown Sochi. "The big
companies are well connected [with officials] and seem to be able to
solve their bureaucratic problems much more quickly and easily than I
can."
Potential boycott?
A potentially
Games-stopping challenge for the Kremlin is Sochi's proximity to the
tense Georgian breakaway republic of Abkhazia, which has seen a wave of
bombings in recent weeks. Georgia, which claims the territory, has
alleged that Russia is illegally using labor and construction materials
from Abkhazia and may be planning to build some Olympic facilities
there. Georgian officials, cautiously backed by Europe and the US, have
warned they might launch a boycott of the Sochi Games if Moscow
continues its policy of aiding separatist Abkhazia.
In a report
last month, the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think
tank, warned that the spat over Abkhazia could "negatively impact" the
Kremlin's hopes for an Olympic triumph. "If Moscow contributes to
[escalating tensions], the IOC would have grounds to reconsider its
decision to give the Games to Sochi," it said.
Silver linings
Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0711/p06s01-woeu.html
Still,
some see the Olympic challenge and the accompanying $12 billion the
Kremlin is pumping in over the next six years as a heaven-sent
opportunity to drag this sleepy, Soviet-era spa town into the 21st
century and also create an example for the rest of Russia to follow.
"In preparing for the Olympic Games, we are getting the kind of
experience that will enable us to reach world standards in many areas,"
says Efim Bitenev, deputy director of the Sochi Olympic Organizing
Committee.
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