http://thefield.scroll.in/813204/once-the-marvellous-city-rio-2016-hasnt-even-started-and-its-already-a-marvellous-mess

OLYMPICS 2016

Once the ‘Marvellous City’, Rio 2016 hasn’t even started and it’s
already a marvellous mess

Rio de Janeiro is an outright Olympic disaster zone, a hellish
nightmare that even Dante wouldn’t have conjured up.

Image credit:  Sergio Moraes/Reuters

Yesterday · 07:00 pm

Samindra Kunti

So here we are: the first Olympic Games in South America, notably in
the country of the future, as Stefan Zweig put it; the first Olympic
Games in Rio de Janeiro, the “Marvellous City”, now a marvellous mess
– a Disney World of gleaming, shining stadiums in the middle of
uncontrollable, sprawling urbanism, punctuated by transport chaos,
corruption, abject poverty and an upper class gorging on more riches.

Little transformative remains from the moment when Pele and Luiz
Inacio Da Silva wept openly at an otherwise frigid ceremony in the
Danish capital Copenhagen in 2009, when Jacques Rogge, the nondescript
then International Olympic Committee president, pulled Rio de Janeiro
out of the envelope – much to the disappointment of Chicago and Barack
Obama – and exclaimed, in a feeble attempt to sound cosmopolitan, “Rio
de Ganeiro”.

Rio’s preparations have been diabolical. Yet underwhelming
preparations have always been a feature of modern Olympic Games, even
in Athens in 1896 when The New York Times correspondent wrote, “There
were plenty of old tin cans and rubbish scattered where once the
silver Ulysses sparkled to the sea: the grove of Academe reminded me
of picturesque bits in shanty town.”

A hellish nightmare
In recent history, Athens in 2004 was very late in delivering venues
that ultimately turned into hapless white elephants. Beijing in 2008
was castigated for its forceful evictions and poor human rights
record. London 2012’s sporting and Stratford legacy was non-existent.
Across the board, Rio de Janeiro is, however, an outright Olympic
disaster zone, a hellish nightmare that even Dante wouldn’t have
conjured up.

Tick the box of Olympic pathologies in Rio: Forced evictions? Yes.
Useless real estate developments? Yes. Environmental disaster? Yes.
White elephants? Yes (probably). Eduardo Paes enjoying himself? Yes.
Strictly speaking, from a technical point of view, that last one is
not an Olympic pathology, but Rio’s flamboyant mayor, who so
disarmingly delivers TED-talks, is at the heart of the Olympic
fallacy, turning a blind eye to his city’s real needs.

Demonstrators hold a banner reading
Demonstrators hold a banner reading "Olympics for whom?" during a
protest against the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro (Image credit:
Tasso Marcelo/AFP)

The sum of Rio’s problems are conjoined by a nationwide economic
downturn with the contentious impeachment of President Dilma Rouseff
by a corrupt parliament, the Petrobras scandal and the threat of the
Zika virus. The Russian doping scandal and, in particular, the IOC’s
meek, if not non-existent, response to it, have aggravated Rio’s
predicament with a city, a country and the landlord (the IOC) in an
institutional crisis of hitherto unseen proportions.

But, yet again, the real tragedy is the absence of a legacy, the
self-proclaimed justification that comes with the modern Olympic
Games, often extensively elaborated on in lofty and flowery lexicon in
bid books. Beijing proclaimed to become a green city in 2008, akin to
an alcoholic swearing off booze; London wanted Britishers to play
sport again in 2012, today, in fact, less do so. At least, Rio is
being honest – the bid book projected social transformation across the
city, but today, there is little pretending. Few promises have been
fulfilled.

Little social transformation
Rio’s inhabitants, in particular in Zona Norte – where the vast
majority of the city’s population lives and commutes an inordinate
number of hours on ramshackle buses to get to work – could have
greatly benefited from the Olympic Games. Both the transport and
sewage systems could have received a major update and boost. Instead,
Guanabara Bay remains an open sewer and the bus is still in vogue for
much of Rio’s giant underclass.

The Bus Rapid Transit system and the extension of Rio’s vertical metro
system from Leblon to Barra Da Tijuca, where the Olympic Park is the
gravitational point of the Olympic Games, benefits wealthy Cariocas,
ferrying the rich from gated condominium to the mall and back.

In the end, the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro are a further
manifestation of “accelerated development”. That’s a mantra for
uncritically placing public money in the service of private profit
creating neo-liberal dream-worlds wherein democratic processes are
suspended, public space militarise, and urban space restructured in
the image of global capital, according to Davis and Monk.

In 2014, the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, a 17-day extravaganza,
came with an astronomical price tag of $55 billion. The figure of $51
billion to transform the region is the de facto accepted total cost by
virtue of its frequent repetition in the media, but it does not
correspond with reality according to Martin Muller, a professor at the
University of Zurich: Sochi overran its projected budget of $12.5
billion 4.5 times by spending $38 billion on non-sports-related
capital costs.

Rio is a mini-Sochi. It is, presumably under the auspices of mayor
Paes, another neo-liberal heist, but that model of hosting Olympic
Games is not tenable. It plunges the IOC, a select group of
aristocrats, into a near-existential crisis – more so than a lack of
bidders for future Olympic Games – for they always proclaim to be a
social movement? Which social movement – one based on greed and graft?

Therein lies Rio’s true legacy, argues David Goldblatt, that profound
reform – not the window-dressing of Agenda 2020 – is needed in the
Olympic cosmos. With Rio, the (hyperbolical) global capital of
dysfunctionality, except for the great and the good, the Olympic myth
has been pierced again. Future Olympic hosts must simply deliver
equitable Games.


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Peace Is Doable

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