India makes mad dash to ready Games Village
[image: Photo]
11:32am BST

By Amlan Chakraborty and Sudipto Ganguly

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Workers removed rain water, scraped dirt and painted
walls at the Commonwealth Games Village on Sunday as India raced to address
complaints of filth and hygiene a week before the start of the showpiece
event.

The Games were supposed to enhance India's image of a rising power, but
shoddy construction, filthy accommodation and security fears have underlined
governance and accountability issues, hurting the runaway pride of Asia's
third largest economy.

Several top athletes, including world champion sprinter Usain Bolt, have
pulled out, taking away some of the shine from the event held every four
years for former British colonies.

Two more Australian athletes, cyclist Travis Meyer and table tennis player
Stephanie Sang, pulled out on Sunday. This comes a day after Britain's
number one tennis player Elena Baltacha withdrew because of concerns about
disease and hygiene.

On Sunday, Indian organising committee officials met to review the work at
the Games Village where masons plastered walls while workers struggled to
dry out the basement of the Village which sits on the flooded plains of the
Yamuna river.

"All finishing work is going on in full swing," Dalbir Singh, mayor of the
Games Village where the athletes will stay, told Reuters.

"It's a world class facility with some minor issues and work is going on to
fix those problems."

Indeed, most of the 34 apartment blocs are gleaming and spacious and fitted
with Italian marble. But much of what is good about the facility has been
overshadowed by athletes' complaints of filth and unfinished work in some of
the living quarters.

While the Games finally seem to be coming together after the intervention of
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, glitches remained.

BED COLLAPSE, TOBACCO SPIT

The Times Now news channel said about 150 apartments out of the 1168 built
for athletes were unliveable. Indian boxer Akhil Kumar was in shock when his
bed caved in on Saturday. It was found the mattress had just been placed on
the bed frame without any support beneath.

"Labourers have done a very bad job. They had spit 'paan' (chewing tobacco)
on the walls, stains of which are almost unremovable," Lalit Bhanot,
secretary general of the Games organising committee, told Reuters.

"We are identifying rooms which are dirty and shutting them down. But we
have adequate rooms so there is nothing to worry."

The Games are estimated to have cost $6 billion (3.8 billion pounds). India
was awarded them in 2003 but did not begin proper preparations until two
years ago. Michael Fennell, chief of Commonwealth Games Federation, has said
India's image has taken a beating.

Athletes from 11 countries have arrived so far and contingents from seven
more nations, including New Zealand and Canada which had delayed their
arrival, are expected on Sunday.

The English team, which had checked into hotels because their accommodation
was not ready, began moving some support staff into the Village on Sunday.
The athletes will follow on Monday.

India had hoped to use the Games to display its growing global economic and
political influence, rivalling neighbour China which put on a spectacular
2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

Instead, they have become a major embarrassment for the world's largest
democracy, where infrastructure projects have progressed slowly and are a
drag on economic growth.

Desperate officials on Friday asked the Indian Army to build a temporary
bridge to replace the $1.1 million footbridge that collapsed last week. The
bridge, providing access to the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, should be
finished within five days.

The bridge collapse and a suspected militant attack on two foreign visitors
threw the Games into crisis. An outbreak of dengue has only compounded
worries.

(Writing by Krittivas
Mukherjee<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=uk&n=krittivas.mukherjee&;>;
Editing by Sanjeev
Miglani<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=uk&n=sanjeev.miglani&;>
)



-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.

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