Commonwealth Games bridge collapses


-27 injured, foreign delegations unhappy with village

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – A footbridge being built for  the Commonwealth Games in India collapsed yesterday, injuring 27 people and highlighting the raft of problems that have so far blighted the event, meant to showcase an emerging global power.

Preparations for October’s $6 billion Commonwealth Games, intended to be the coming-out party for India that the Olympics were for China, are so far behind schedule that the event risks becoming a farce.

The shooting of two foreign visitors by suspected militants  in Delhi on Sunday has combined with a dengue fever epidemic, heavy monsoon rains, construction delays, graft scandals and  traffic chaos to give the Games that sinking feeling.

A footbridge being built for the Commonwealth Games has collapsed, injuring 27 people

Police said the collapsed bridge was just outside the main  stadium, a reminder of India’s sometimes-lax building standards.
Commonwealth Games Federation president Michael Fennell said yesterday the two-week event, starting Oct. 3, was seriously compromised by conditions at the Games village that have “shocked the majority”.

Canada’s Games team said it might delay the arrival of some of its athletes if adequate accommodation was not available.
Commonwealth Games Canada president Andrew Pipe accused the organisers of “indifference that borders on the intransigent”.
“This would have been an opportunity for India to shine,” he said. “Instead I think it risks considerable national embarrassment unless some of these deficiencies can be addressed.”

WITHDRAWALS

World discus champion Dani Samuels of Australia pulled out of the Games because of security and health concerns, as did England’s world triple jump champion Phillips Idowu.

“Sorry people, but I have children to think about. My safety is more important to them than a medal,” Idowu wrote on his  Twitter feed.

Nevertheless, Canada, New Zealand and Australia said they  remained committed to sending teams.
Jamaica played down the problems.

“We have gone to Games before, not only in Third World  countries, where weeks before the event people were concerned about the state of readiness and when the Games began everything was in place,” said Jamaica Amateur Athletic Association vice president Warren Blake.

Indian officials remained upbeat. “I am as confident and as cool as ever about our organizing. These are all minor hiccups,” Urban Development Minister S. Jaipal Reddy told reporters.

The dismal preparations have, for many, underscored the  out-of-touch, slow-paced leadership of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Congress government, raising questions about how a graft-ridden, inefficient state can hope to compete with China.
“It’s just one of so many goof-ups,” said Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, a political economist.

“This will not do the government any good. When you have a  big bash and benefits are minimal, it sharpens and widens the  inequalities in India. People notice.”

Tales of billions of wasted dollars will not help.  Perceptions of India’s entrepreneurial prowess may also slip if  roofs leak and journalists wonder where the Wi-Fi is.

“Fingers crossed, India may pull off a miracle,” said Boria  Majumdar, a sports historian who has written the book ‘Sellotape  Legacy: Delhi and the Commonwealth Games’.

“But it will have to be a miracle. No doubt about that”.

DELAYS AND DIRT
Construction delays mean venues have not been locked down  securely by police until two weeks before the Games.
Some four or five accommodation towers at the village lack  facilities such as fitted toilets and plumbing. Rubble and   masonry litter unfinished gardens.

A crude cement slope appears to be an unplanned fix for  disabled athletes requiring access to one apartment block.
The athletes’ training centre is still to be fitted out. The  water in the training and recreational swimming pools is dirty,  with insect larvae breeding on the surface.

“They have had some delegations staying there and they have  been reporting constantly about the filth in the village,” Games  Federation president Fennell told CNN-IBN TV.

Organisers say there is no question of the Games being put  off, but the nightmare is that one delegation exits and others  follow. And the problems are not receding.

There are worries that puddles in building sites harbour  mosquitoes that could spread dengue fever, which has put  hundreds of Delhi residents in hospital.

Costs are running at 17 times the original estimates, and  the government’s anti-corruption watchdog has identified 16  projects with suspect financing.

The insistence on holding the Games in October has caused  some athletes to pull out due to conflicts with Olympic  qualifiers. There is a high chance of rain at the opening  ceremony.

Triple Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica is the  highest profile athlete to decide to skip the event.
But many venues, including the main Jawaharlal Nehru  stadium, have been praised as world-class.

And officials note that other events such as the 2004 Athens  Olympics were dogged by problems, but turned out fine.