Wankhede becomes no-go area after failing safety checks

MUMBAI, (Reuters) – Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium went  into complete lockdown today just 24 hours after it was  criticised by the city’s top fire chief for not meeting safety  standards.
All unauthorised personnel were being shooed away by  harassed security guards, who were under orders not to allow any  media to come within 75 metres of the stadium, which will host  the World Cup final on April 2.
“We are under so much tension. Every day something or the  other is happening. Please go away. Our jobs are on the line. If  any officer sees you, we will be in trouble,” a uniformed guard  told Reuters as he escorted journalists out of the stadium  complex.
There was no disguising the fact that time was fast running  short too for Mumbai’s cricket authorities to get their problems  sorted before the venue hosts the first of its three World Cup  matches on March 13.
Safety inspectors were unhappy that mandatory fire  equipment, including water hydrants, no-smoking indicators, fire  alarms and extinguishers were still not in place.
“They should have sorted this beforehand as you never want  to leave these things so late,” a Mumbai fire officer, who  declined to reveal his name, told Reuters while leaning through  the window of his engine after freeing a trapped bird from a  house situated just a stone’s throw away from the stadium.
“It’s never good to hear negative things about your city …  and we are still waiting for them to let us know when we can  come back,” he added referring to the clearance the fire brigade  have to give Wankhede before it can host any matches.
All the negative publicity surrounding the imposing  33,000-seater concrete and steel structure, which rises out from  the middle of one of Mumbai’s poshest areas of Marine Lights,  has not gone down well in the neighbourhood.

REALLY SHAMEFUL
“After what happened here (when more than 150 people were  killed in the 2008 Mumbai attacks), the authorities cannot allow  any kind of safety or security lapses. It’s really shameful,”  local resident Mita Mithani told Reuters.
Although the stadium was a no-go area, a cacophony of  drilling, hammering and banging sounds could be heard drifting  out from inside the arena.
Outside, dozens of workers were busy carrying out a  multitude of tasks on the path leading up to the Wankhede.
Some labourers, wearing protective masks, crouched on the  ground to weld together metal barriers, while others dragged  metre after metre of heavy electric cables from the public roads  right up to the stadium entrance.
Even a sign reading “Mumbai Cricket Association” was in a  state of disrepair and appeared to be attached precariously on  top of a pair of rusted metal poles that looked like they could  topple over at any time over the labourers working underneath.
As the arena also failed an inspection by the ICC in  December, it was little wonder that officials in charge had  closed ranks on Saturday and refused to talk to the media.
Friday’s warning once again cast doubts on India’s  capability as a host of major events after last year’s  Commonwealth Games in Delhi ended up being a public relations  shambles despite a late scramble by the government.
India had intended to showcase its growing financial might  through the $6 billion Games in October but organisational  blunders in the lead-up to the event turned it into an  embarrassment.
There were more red faces in India last month when the ICC  shifted the high profile India v England World Cup match,  scheduled for Feb 27, out of Kolkata’s Eden Gardens to Bangalore  due to a delay in construction work.