Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony Could Be Moved- Macron
French President Emmanuel Macron says the Paris Olympics opening ceremony could move from the River Seine if the security risk is too high.
Mr Macron
said it could be "limited to the Trocadéro", across the Seine from
the Eiffel Tower, instead of covering the planned stretch of the river.
He added
that it could even be moved to the Stade de France, reverting to a traditional
ceremony.
The opening
ceremony is set to be the first to be held outside a stadium.
More than
10,000 athletes are expected to sail along a 6km stretch of the Seine on some
160 barges.
The
organisers had originally planned to accommodate some 600,000 people to watch
the ceremony from riverbanks, but that has now been scaled down to 300,000
people.
It has
already been revealed that tourists will not be given free access to watch the
ceremony, as was originally planned. Instead, tickets will be by invitation
only, not via open registration.
"This
opening ceremony... is a world first. We can do it and we are going to do
it," Mr Macron said in an interview with French media outlets BFMTV and
RMC.
But for the
first time, he admitted that there were back up plans in place.
"There
are plan Bs and plan Cs", he said, adding: "We are preparing them in
parallel, we will analyse this in real time."
Security
concerns have been heightened following the threats by the Islamic State group
(IS) to Champions League quarter-final football matches in Paris, Madrid and
London.
Last week, a
post was shared by Al-Azaim Foundation, a media channel responsible for
spreading messages from the IS-K branch of the Islamist militant group.
IS-K also
claimed responsibility for the deadly attack on Crocus City Hall in Moscow
last month.
There are
also concerns that the wars in Ukraine and Gaza could increase the security
threat, with French authorities mentioning the possibility of a drone attack.
In the same
interview, Mr Macron also said he would do "everything possible" to
agree an Olympic truce.
The French
president was alluding to a historic tradition that peace must prevail during
the Olympic games.
"We
want to work towards an Olympic truce and I think it is an occasion for me to
engage with a lot of our partners," he said, adding that he had asked the
Chinese President Xi Jinping to help him achieve it.
The
competition is set to run from 26 July until 11 August. The Paralympic Games
then follows from 28 August to 8 September.
From BBCNews
No comments