Riot
police open way for torch through Rio protest
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[August 04, 2016]
By Pedro Fonseca
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Police used
stun grenades and tear gas to clear protesters in the path of the
Olympic torch in a poor suburb of Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday, two
days before South America's first Olympic Games open under tight
security.
Olympic Brazilian sailors earlier delivered the torch to the host
city's mayor after crossing Guanabara Bay near the end of a
20,000-km (12,400-mile) journey through one of the world's largest
and most diverse countries.
The flame landed on terra firma at 9:15 a.m. (08:15 a.m. EDT) while
just kilometers away 450 heavily armed police battled drug
traffickers to carry out dozens of arrest orders in the Alemao slum,
an area near the international airport and close to the main road to
Olympic venues.
Armed soldiers stood patrol on highways and on many corners
throughout the iconic beach city in Brazil's largest security
operation ever. Some 85,000 police, soldiers and security personnel
will be deployed in Rio, more than double the amount in London in
2012, to deter both violent street crime and the threat of attacks
by extremists.
Police said anti-government protesters in Duque de Caixas, on Rio's
north side, threw rocks and blocked the torch's path. Police
dispersed them with pepper spray and rubber bullets. A video of the
incident spurred social media criticism of the police and amplified
complaints that the Games ignored the poor.
A representative for the local organizing committee called the
incident isolated and said the protesters had held up the torch but
its route was not changed.
Three people were injured by rubber bullets, including a 10-year-old
girl, local media reported.
The clash, which came a day after anti-torch protests in nearby
towns and amid several days of gang violence in northern Brazil,
underscored social tension in the massive country.
The world's largest sporting event comes to Brazil at a challenging
time, in the midst of the country's worst recession in at least a
quarter century and an impeachment trial of a suspended president.
Many residents struggling with the dire economy question the wisdom
of hosting the Olympics, a bid Brazil won in 2009 while the economy
was booming.
"The Olympics is a waste of time. The Games did not bring any
benefits to Rio de Janeiro," said waiter Adriano Souza, 25,
lamenting the lack of public transportation to get around the
sprawling, mountainous city.
Residents have faced hours of traffic jams in recent days as new
express bus lanes ferrying athletes and visitors to sport venues
take up highway space, leading Mayor Eduardo Paes to declare
Thursday the fourth city holiday of the Games.
After picking up the torch at a local naval academy, a grinning Paes
took it on its first laps through the streets of downtown Rio, known
locally as "the marvelous city." A few protesters cropped up in the
mostly celebratory crowd, which cheered to the pulse of drums and
samba music.
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Mayor Eduardo Paes (C) carries the Olympic torch just after it was
transported across Guanabara Bay from Niteroi to Rio de Janeiro
three days before the official start of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games,
in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, August 3, 2016. Beth Santos/Courtesy of
Rio de Janeiro City Hall/Handout via REUTERS
In addition to balking at the $12 billion price tag, protesters are
calling for more accountability from elected officials after a
massive corruption scandal focused on the state oil company ensnared
dozens of high-level politicians.
The economic malaise might have contributed to a larger excess
supply of tickets before the Games' start than in London. The Rio
Organizing Committee said 1.3 million tickets remained unsold on
Wednesday, though nearly half of those tickets are for soccer
matches held in other cities.
EARLY TEST AT SOCCER MATCH
The symbol of the Olympic Games will visit more towns and return to
the city center on Thursday ahead of Friday's opening ceremony in
the famed Maracană stadium, site of the World Cup final in 2014.
Some cariocas, as residents of Rio are known, said they were eager
to show the world their city is ready for the international
spotlight and pleased they had largely delivered venues on time.
"It was easy to get here and there are plenty of police," said
architect Sergio Lima e Silva, who was attending the first sporting
event of the Games: a women's soccer match between South Africa and
Sweden in a new stadium.
While the torch's tour through 300 cities has generally been smooth,
it did spur an international outcry when authorities had to shoot a
jaguar after the animal escaped from its handlers at a ceremony in
the Amazon city of Manaus.
The name of the final torch bearer is a closely guarded secret, but
soccer legend Pele said on Tuesday he been invited to light the
Olympic cauldron on Friday and was checking availability with his
sponsors.
(Additional reporting by Thales Carneiro, Tatiana Ramil, Brad Brooks
and Anthony Boadle; Writing by Caroline Stauffer; Editing by Mary
Milliken, Toni Reinhold)
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