England and Scotland raise doubts over Commonwealths

** England and Scotland raise doubts over Commonwealths **

England and Scotland’s Commonwealth Games teams are concerned the poor quality of the athletes village in Delhi may put the whole event in doubt.
Scottish officials found their original accommodation to be “unsafe and unfit for human habitation”.
England are “optimistic” they will compete, but say urgent work is needed before the Games begin on 3 October.
But Welsh officials are content with their headquarters and believe that organisers “should be able to do it.”
Northern Ireland’s first representatives are leaving for India on Tuesday and have lined up alternative accommodation in case their scheduled quarters are not ready.

**Building works have fallen well behind schedule in the build-up to the Games and Thursday’s official opening of the village to 7000 athletes and officials now looms large. **

Commonwealth Games Federation chief Michael Fennell, who has written to the Indian government expressing his concern over progress, has warned that security around the site has delayed improvements.

“Many nations that have already sent their advanced parties to set up within the village have made it abundantly clear that, as of the afternoon of 20 September, the Commonwealth Games Village is seriously compromised,” he said.

 Scotland claim that the accommodation they were allocated on arrival was unfinished, but that they encountered problems even after being moved to a completed section. 

Team officials, with the help of Games volunteers, cleaned the seven-storey building themselves to bring conditions up to an acceptable standard.
“We now have grave concerns as to whether the village as a whole will meet the health and safety standards required,” read a statement.
Scotland have called on the Commonwealth Games Federation “to make a realistic decision as to at what point and under what conditions…the Games will be able to go ahead should the village issues not be resolved”.
India’s monsoon weather has revealed new plumbing and electrical problems ahead of the arrival of England’s first athletes on Thursday.
“Commonwealth Games England remains optimistic that England participation at the Games can go ahead,” read a statement.
“However there is a lot still to be done in the Village and this needs to be done with some urgency.”

 Wales have previously lodged a formal complaint over conditions in the village, however chef de mission Chris Jenkins is now confident his team's accommodation is on track. 

“It’s in a good state now: it’s clean, the plumbing’s working, the wiring’s working, the electric is working, the air conditioning works, the medical clinic is pretty much set up.” he told BBC Sport Wales.
“They should be able to do it, they have enough time but time is running out, they’ve got to start now on these towers.”
New Zealand team manager David Currie is less optimistic.
He has found alternative rooms for his country’s 300-strong contingent of athletes and officials and believes the whole event may be in danger.
“If the village is not ready and athletes can’t come, obviously the implications of that are that it’s not going to happen,” he told New Zealand radio network newstalk ZB.
“Unless there is tremendous effort and energy and problem-solving ability to get it done, it’s going to be extremely hard to get across the line.”
Australia and Canada are the other two teams to have set up camp in Delhi at the earliest opportunity.
Australia’s chef de mission Steve Moneghetti said his officials “didn’t seem that concerned about the overall condition of the village”, but claimed organisers “have got two days to do what’s probably going to take about two weeks”.

Delhi Games village ‘unfit for athletes’ - Its filthy, unhygienic and unfit for human

Delhi Games village ‘unfit for athletes’

Sanjoy Majumder explains the problems with the athletes’ village

The Commonwealth Games Federation head has demanded the Indian government take immediate steps to improve conditions at the athletes’ village in Delhi.

Team delegates described the accommodation as filthy, unhygienic and unfit for human habitation.

But organisers of the event, which runs from 3 to 14 October, said they would provide an “excellent facility”.

Meanwhile, at least 19 people were injured as a footbridge collapsed near the main Games venue.

This is the latest embarrassment for organisers of Delhi’s Commonwealth Games.

The Games village - made up of several blocks of high-rise luxury flats for the athletes who are due to begin arriving on Friday - was meant to be the event’s showpiece.

The chief of the organising committee, Suresh Kalmadi, had said it would be better than the village at the Beijing Olympics.

Now his words are coming back to haunt him. Advance teams have described the state of the flats as shocking.

The village itself has been built on the banks of the Yamuna river. Just outside it are pools of green, stagnant water left over from flooding after Delhi’s worst monsoon in three decades.

It’s a breeding ground for mosquitoes and has raised fears of disease - there have been nearly 100 cases of dengue fever over the past month.

The organisers now certainly have their work cut out.

The steel walkway was being built to link the car park with the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium.

It is the latest setback to an event which has been plagued by construction delays, allegations of corruption and mismanagement, and a dengue fever outbreak in the Indian capital.

New Zealand, Scotland, Canada and Northern Ireland have demanded their teams be put up in hotels if their accommodation is not ready.

Team Scotland said in a statement that on arrival in Delhi last week their officials found “its allocated accommodation blocks were far from finished and in their view, unsafe and unfit for human habitation”.

Commonwealth Games England called on Tuesday for “urgent” work on the facilities, raising concerns about “plumbing, electrical and other operational details”.

Michael Fennell, the Commonwealth Games Federation president, said he had written to the Indian cabinet secretary urging immediate action.

He said “many issues remain unresolved” and the athletes’ village was “seriously compromised”.

Although advance parties from participating nations had been impressed with the international zone and main dining area, he continued, they had been “shocked” by the state of the accommodation itself.

“The village is the cornerstone of any Games and the athletes deserve the best possible environment to prepare for their competition,” Mr Fennell added.

The collapse of a footbridge near the main venue is the latest setback
Two days before the village officially opens to the first of 7,000 athletes and officials, New Zealand chef de mission Dave Currie warned that organisers would struggle to finish everything in time.

There was even a possibility the Games could be cancelled, he added.

He said toilets in the accommodation were leaking and did not flush, and there were piles of building debris in bathrooms.

He told New Zealand commercial radio on Tuesday: "If the village is not ready and athletes can’t come, obviously the implications of that are that it’s not going to happen.

“It’s pretty grim really and certainly disappointing when you consider the amount of time they had to prepare.”

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

I can assure everyone there is no cause for worry”

In Melbourne, Australia’s chef de mission, retired marathon runner Steve Moneghetti, said the hosts “have got two days to do what’s probably going to take about two weeks”.

But organising committee vice-chairman Randhir Singh told reporters in Delhi that everything would be ready on time.

“I can assure everyone there is no cause for worry,” the news agency AFP quoted him as saying. "Delegates have praised the village as one of the best.

“We are working round the clock to take care of any problems. When the athletes arrive here, they will find an excellent facility.”

There have also been safety concerns surrounding the Games, heightened on the weekend after gunmen on a motorcycle shot and wounded two tourists near Delhi’s Jama Masjid, one of India’s biggest mosques.

Re: England and Scotland raise doubts over Commonwealths

insaan ko apnay sai bera kaam pekarna hi nahi chaiay.or kia keh sakta hun mai..