India embarrassed after blunders

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Source: http://www.iol.co.za/sport/more-sport/india-embarrassed-after-blunders-1.684585

New Delhi – From a “toxic” pool to empty stadiums and faulty boxing scales, the first week of the New Delhi Commonwealth Games has served up daily blunders that have deepened India's embarrassment.

The event in the Indian capital, which finishes next Thursday, is the most expensive in the history of the competition, but could set records for another reason: being the most accident and gaffe-prone.

“I think a lot of it has been teething problems and because India has never hosted an event of this scale,” sports marketing consultant Indranil Das Blah of Kwan, a consultancy, told AFP.

“But if the planning had been more organised then there wouldn't have been so many problems,” he said.

The spectacular opening ceremony last Sunday gave no clue of the troubled preparations for the Games, which saw teams threaten to pull out, construction work finished at the last-minute and a bridge at the main stadium collapse.

The three-hour dance extravaganza wowed spectators and the fiercely critical local press almost enough to erase memories of the snake found in the tennis complex or the stray dogs rounded up at the athletes' village.

Once the sport started, however, the rushed preparations – which left little time for practice or testing – appeared to take their toll.

New problems emerged daily and even the opening ceremony had not gone as smoothly as it had seemed from the stands.

“We were treated like cattle. It was disgraceful,” Australian team chef de mission Steve Moneghetti complained afterwards, saying his athletes were forced to wait in searing heat before they appeared.

On Monday there were farcical scenes at the official boxing weigh-in, which was eventually abandoned after faulty scales showed most of the fighters were too heavy. The scales were eventually repaired.

“During the course of any Games, even if you have perfect organisation, there are issues,” Commonwealth Games Federation boss Michael Fennell told reporters afterwards.

On Tuesday organisers came under fire over the glaringly empty stadiums, even for crowd-pulling sports such as hockey or wrestling, which saw some competitors win medals in front of small groups of cheering family members.

It became a theme of the week, with the opening day of the athletics woefully attended in the giant but largely empty 60,000-capacity main stadium.

The Games's top Indian organiser, Suresh Kalmadi, who was booed at the opening ceremony, admitted that sales kiosks had not been set up in time, but insisted that solutions would be found to fill the empty seats.

“We are working on the children from schools, already steps have been taken in that direction, and also from the lower level of society,” he told reporters.

There were also complaints from teams about transport, with many of the official Games' cars being driven by men recruited from outside Delhi with only a passing knowledge of the capital's streets.

On Wednesday, the athletics event faced a make-or-break few hours as 1,000 labourers toiled through the night to repair the track and field, which were badly damaged during the opening ceremony.

When the sport got underway, spectators were bombarded by insects drawn to the bright floodlights, and many complained about the lack of food and drink and difficulties with heavy security.

Thursday brought sobering news that three Ugandan Games officials required hospital treatment after a car accident at the athletes' village, when a “tyre killer” safety barrier malfunctioned under their vehicle.

An Indian team official was also hospitalised during the week with dengue fever, a mosquito-borne virus raging in Delhi that had caused many athletes to reflect on whether to take part before the event.

Commonwealth Games organisers meanwhile launched an investigation into the water quality at the event's pool after reports that more than 50 swimmers had fallen ill.

Around 40 English competitors and 12 Australians had complained of feeling unwell after competing at the S.P. Mukherjee Aquatics Complex, with team officials insisting that the problem area was the warm-up pool.

Plumbing problems were also reported at the athletes' village, where hundreds of condoms flushed down toilets are blocking sewage pipes.

By the end of the week even the international media had reached breaking point when the central information service, which provides results and schedules, was breaking down so often that a collective complaint was made. – Sapa-AFP

India has made a monumental stuff-up, and have probably barred themselves from hosting another major event like this in the near future.
 
Sorry for India, but this just makes one feel even prouder of what we pulled off with the WC and what we pull off every time with the major rugby and cricket events. Well done SA :)
 
The comment that guy made about the condom problem though is classic:

He said at least they are being responsible and using condoms :D.
 
We are working on the children from schools, already steps have been taken in that direction, and also from the lower level of society,” he told reporters.

this part has me scratching my head. it looks like india still treats the poor as second class citizens which is disgusting :(

if i read this part incorrectly then i apologise but it looks like this d0uche is referring to poor\slum people when referring to "lower level of society" am i reading this wrong ?
 
this part has me scratching my head. it looks like india still treats the poor as second class citizens which is disgusting :(

if i read this part incorrectly then i apologise but it looks like this d0uche is referring to poor\slum people when referring to "lower level of society" am i reading this wrong ?
While I am not condoning it in any way, your reaction stems from not having grown up with the system ..bear in mind how, in our (ever getting more remote) past we all thought apartheid was the natural order of things.

And he's referring to their caste system which, as is ALWAYS the case where you involve (in)humanity in something, it gets perverted to the least beneficial it could be, here's a teaser:
The Indian caste system describes the system of social stratification and social restrictions in India in which social classes are defined by thousands of endogamous hereditary groups, often termed jātis or castes. Within a jāti, there exist exogamous groups known as gotras, the lineage or clan of an individual. In a handful of sub-castes such as Shakadvipi, endogamy within a gotra is permitted and alternative mechanisms of restricting endogamy are used (e.g. banning endogamy within a surname).

The Indian caste system involves four castes and outcasted social groups. Although generally identified with Hinduism, the caste system was also observed among followers of other religions in the Indian subcontinent, including some groups of Muslims and Christians. Caste barriers have mostly broken down in large cities, though they persist in rural areas of the country, where 72% of India's population resides

None of the Hindu scriptures endorses caste-based discrimination, and the Indian Constitution has outlawed caste-based discrimination, in keeping with the secular, democratic principles that founded the nation. Nevertheless, the caste system, in various forms, continues to survive in modern India because of a combination of political factors and social perceptions and behavior.
 
On Tuesday organisers came under fire over the glaringly empty stadiums, even for crowd-pulling sports such as hockey or wrestling, which saw some competitors win medals in front of small groups of cheering family members.
That made me lol :D
 
hopefully they dont mess up the cricket world cup

I recall the last CWC that was hosted there, where people set stadium seats on fire after India lost. People were saying that they would not host another WC, but it's funny how quickly things change when you throw a lot of $$$ around.
 
Note how the Australians and English swimmers got ill from that nasty pool water. The South African swimmers were fine. We are used to sh*t water coming from our taps. You all thought our municipalities had dropped the ball and our declining water quality was a service delivery problem. They saw this Delhi Commonweatlh Games coming and prepared for it.
 
Note how the Australians and English swimmers got ill from that nasty pool water. The South African swimmers were fine. We are used to sh*t water coming from our taps. You all thought our municipalities had dropped the ball and our declining water quality was a service delivery problem. They saw this Delhi Commonweatlh Games coming and prepared for it.

Hahahahaha!
 
Note how the Australians and English swimmers got ill from that nasty pool water. The South African swimmers were fine. We are used to sh*t water coming from our taps. You all thought our municipalities had dropped the ball and our declining water quality was a service delivery problem. They saw this Delhi Commonweatlh Games coming and prepared for it.
Moet kak wees :D ...our okes may be fine, the rest are welcome to their "Delhi Belly" :erm:
 
If you have not visited India, it is hard to undrstand the set-up and the type of country it is.

On most of my travels there, I have experienced incidents of UTTER AND ABSOLUTE CHAOS! That is India: "organised chaos" :)

I would not have it any other way though ... it makes traveling there 100 x more magical ... not an hour goes by without an adventure!

Of course, the athletes were there to compete, so that was a different story.
 
If you have not visited India, it is hard to undrstand the set-up and the type of country it is.

On most of my travels there, I have experienced incidents of UTTER AND ABSOLUTE CHAOS! That is India: "organised chaos" :)

I would not have it any other way though ... it makes traveling there 100 x more magical ... not an hour goes by without an adventure!

Of course, the athletes were there to compete, so that was a different story.

If people complain about the taxis here, they should pay a visit to India. Lanes, what's that? :D
 
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