Friday, July 13, 2007

PAN-AMERICAN GAMES SET TO BEGIN !

Brazilians hope a successful games will boost Olympics hopes. Thousands of people are attending the opening of one of the biggest sporting events in the Americas - the Pan-American Games.
The competition, in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro, will involve more than 5,000 athletes from 42 countries.
Around 20,000 police officers will be on duty to ensure that the Games run smoothly, amid concern about the level of violence and crime in Rio.
Brazil has not hosted an event of this size since the 1950 World Cup.
That was one of the country's greatest moments of sporting anguish, when the Brazilian team lost to underdogs Uruguay in the final.
Rio is hoping for better memories from this event, which is being staged in the refurbished Maracana Stadium.
Police crackdown
It is thought up to $2bn (£1bn) have been invested to make the Games a success, several times more than was first planned.
The authorities here hope if all goes well, it will boost their chances of securing the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics.

Athletes will be competing in some 40 sports.
But this has its sceptics even within Brazil, says the BBC's Gary Duffy in Rio.
There were reports of a last-minute rush to complete work, but most venues now seem to be ready.
Security will also be a concern here, amid high levels of crime and violence in Rio, our correspondent says.
The latest casualty was a 16-year-old boy, killed by a stray bullet in a suburb of the city as he prepared breakfast in his own home.
The deployment of 20,000 police officers is aimed at ensuring that everything runs smoothly.
But some recent high-profile operations meant to target drug dealers in the city's favelas, or shanty towns, have been criticised by human rights organisations.
In one day alone, 19 people died.
But the authorities deny any link between the recent escalation in police action and the Games.
The Pan-American Games are due to run to the end of July, with the athletes competing in almost 40 different sports.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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