Google – AFP, Stuart Williams (AFP), 5 February 2014
The Olympic
rings in front of the Bolshoy Ice Dome prior to the start of the
2014 Sochi
Winter Olympic Games on February 5, 2014 (AFP, Damien Meyer)
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Sochi —
Russia paraded the Olympic torch through host city Sochi on Wednesday -- two
days before the official opening of the Winter Games -- as President Vladimir
Putin declared the country "ready".
Seven years
after its successful bid stunned the world and paved the way for the hosting of
the biggest event in Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union, organisers are
now making the finishing touches for the opening of the 22nd Winter Olympics.
Yet
concerns still remain over Russia's suitability as a venue, with a another
anti-Games ecological activist sent to jail and protests planned worldwide over
Russia's now notorious anti-gay law.
The Olympic
flame was taken by runners through the outskirts of Sochi and later carried up
by train to Rosa Khutor, where the alpine events are being held.
The stadium
itself is 40 kilometres (25 miles) south of Sochi and the flame is expected to
be carried there by runners, on trains and on boats in time for Friday's
opening ceremony.
Flame
carriers are set to include UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and IOC president
Thomas Bach as well as Russian stars such as pole vault champion Yelena
Isinbayeva.
"Russia
has worked towards this moment for seven years. It has been a national
project," said Putin as he visited the Olympic village. "Russia is
ready for the Olympic Games."
There has
been particular concern that not all accommodation for the media has been ready
on time, with reporters swapping tales of last-minute repairs but organisers
insist nobody has gone without a room.
'Millions
will be watching you'
Putin was
given a guided tour around the coastal Olympic village, where athletes in
non-mountain sports such as ice hockey and skating are based, by Isinbayeva,
who has long been one of his most public backers.
Putin said
in an address to the Russian team that "millions are going to be watching
for every one of your performances".
"We
are really counting on you. We have a young, very promising team and I do not
doubt that you will do everything to be successful."
Russia won only three gold medals at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver -- seen as a national debacle by most Russians -- but experts say it is unlikely to do much better on home soil.
Stars to watch
in Sochi (AFP, K. Tian/Jonathan Storey, jj)
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Russia won only three gold medals at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver -- seen as a national debacle by most Russians -- but experts say it is unlikely to do much better on home soil.
Security at
the Winter Games has also been a major issue, with tens of thousands of members
of security forces on duty to ward off the threat of attacks from militants
from the nearby Northern Caucasus.
"This
(security) is always a worry, not just at international events but at political
ones too," admitted Putin, recalling the Boston marathon bombings carried
out by Islamist militants from the troubled Caucasus region, which killed three
and wounded 260.
'Sport not
a stage for politics'
The Games,
with an estimated price tag of $50 billion, are the most expensive in history
but also among the most controversial.
Gay rights
group All Out is organising protests in 19 cities around the world -- including
London and New York -- urging sponsors to "break their silence" on
Russia's controversial legislation banning gay propaganda to minors.
In a
protest in Melbourne, a few dozen protesters gathered outside Flinders Street
railway station, brandishing pictures with the slogan "Olympic sponsors
speak out now!"
Environmental
activists have criticised the ecological damage caused by the Games.
Courts in
the Sochi region have this week jailed two activists from the anti-Games group
Environmental Watch on North Caucasus (EWNC) for terms of 15 and five days on
charges of petty offences.
Fireworks
illuminate the sky over the Fisht
Olympic Stadium during the 2014 Sochi
Winter Olympics opening ceremony
rehearsals on February 4, 2014 (AFP,
Loic Venance)
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The aim is
"to intimidate the ecologist community who consider the holding of these
Games to be a national shame," the EWNC said.
In a nod to
Russia, IOC President Bach in a speech on Tuesday said everybody must fight
together against "discrimination on grounds of... sexual orientation or
any other prejudice."
But he said
the Olympic Village should be protected from political demonstrations
"however important and precious the cause may be."
Sport
should not be a "stage for political dissent or for trying to score points
in internal or external political contests," he said.
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