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regular-article-logo Thursday, 02 May 2024

France downsizes Paris Olympics 2024 opening ceremony crowd by about half

The giant show on the River Seine on July 26 will mark the first time that an opening ceremony is held outside of a usual stadium setting

AP/PTI Paris Published 01.02.24, 07:14 AM
A general view of the River Seine on which the Paris Olympics opening ceremony will be held in July.

A general view of the River Seine on which the Paris Olympics opening ceremony will be held in July. Getty Images

France interior minister Gerald Darmanin said on Wednesday that some 300,000 spectators will be able to attend the opening ceremony for the Paris Olympics, about half the size of what was originally planned.

The giant show on the River Seine on July 26 will mark the first time that an opening ceremony is held outside of a usual stadium setting.

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It will also involve a massive security operation, with tens of thousands of police officers and soldiers deployed.

The athletes will be paraded through the heart of the French capital on boats on the Seine along a 6km route. Both banks of the river will be lined by spectators, behind multiple security cordons.

Speaking on French TV channel France 2, Darmanin said current plans would allow for 100,000 paying spectators with a waterside view, and more than 220,000 people with free tickets on the river’s upper embankments.

Organisers had originally estimated that around 600,000 spectators could watch the ceremony, but Darmanin did not give a reason for why they have revised those figures.

Asked whether he had insomnia thinking about the ceremony, Darmanin replied that he is sleeping well.

“I know that we have the best security forces in the world and we’ll be able to show that France is capable of winning medals and, above all, of hosting the world without any problems,” he said.

In December, French president Emmanuel Macron said the ceremony could be moved for security reasons if France is hit again in the run-up by extremist attacks. He cited deadly extremist attacks that hit Paris in 2015 as an example of the type of severe crisis that could force a rethink.

Translation devices

Paris’ public transport system (RATP) will provide more than 3,000 agents with artificial intelligence-supported translation devices to help hundreds of thousands of visitors navigate the capital’s network during the Olympics.

The handheld Tradivia device can translate between French and 16 different languages, including Mandarin, Arabic and Korean, with the text appearing on a screen as well as being read out loud.

The service will remain after the July 26 to August 11 Olympics.

“We will have visitors from all over the world who will come ... It is important to provide them with the right information,” RATP representative Gregoire de Lasteyrie told reporters.

“Being able to speak to them in as many languages as possible and helping them find their way in Paris is extremely important.”

Metro workers said the device would also give them more confidence.

“We no longer have this apprehension, this apprehension of approaching visitors,” Paris metro worker Raphael Gassette said.

“We no longer have this fear of thinking ‘oh no we’re not going to understand each other’.”

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