Give a home to us not the Olympics, say protesters

Published on Mon, Feb 08, 2010 at 09:50 |  Source : Reuters

Updated at Mon, Feb 08, 2010 at 15:57  

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
0
0
Share on Tumblr
Give a home to us not the Olympics, say protesters

RELATED NEWS

Robert Bonner is not impressed that Vancouver is hosting the Winter Olympics and thinks the millions of dollars spent on the event would have better gone on alleviating problems like poverty and homelessness.

"Spending C$178 million for a skating oval isn't really impressive when you're sleeping in a doorway," Bonner told the "Poverty Olympics", a colourful protest on Sunday to highlight Vancouver's social problems.

Vancouver, on Canada's Pacific coast, has been ranked in surveys as one of the world's most "liveable" cities but it is also home to one of Canada's poorest and most drug-infested neighbourhoods -- the Downtown Eastside.

Sign-holding marchers chanted "Homes not Games" and other slogans as they made their way through the neighbourhood to the rhythm of a small ragtag marching band and costumed mascots such as "Itchy the Bedbug" and "Chewy the Rat".

More than 200 attended the protest.

"Canada is a rich nation ... but you wouldn't know it in the Downtown Eastside," said Bonner, a well known activist in the community.

The Games (Feb. 12-28) have a mostly privately funded budget of C$1.7 billion but the government has spent C$580 million on venue construction costs and budgeted C$900 million for security.

A provincial auditor's report in 2006 put the real cost to tax payers at C$2.5 billion but Olympic critics claim it is actually closer to C$6 billion -- figures that Games organisers and government officials dismiss as too high.

INCREASED HOMELESSNESS
Olympic critics say the Games have increased homelessness by fuelling gentrification in the Downtown Eastside, leaving the poor with few options in a city that already has some of Canada's least-affordable housing.

Poverty activists say homelessness in Vancouver has increased 373 percent since 2002 when the city bid for the Games but researchers say it is impossible to know if the event was actually responsible for displacing people.

Olympic supporters say hosting the Games has actually benefited the Downtown Eastside by promoting economic development and spurring job training programmes to get residents involved in Olympic-related construction.

"We've been there and tried to help in every way we can. The Olympics are not designed to solve all of the problems of the world," Rusty Goepel, chairman of the Vancouver Organising Committee (VANOC), told Reuters on Sunday.

Poverty activists acknowledge too that the Olympics has also given them a stage to publicise their complaints of government inaction to the international media that has descended on Vancouver for the Games.

Some residents of the Downtown Eastside said they had no problem with the Olympics. "All it is is a bunch of countries getting together trying to be the best they can be," said one man, shaking his head as the marchers passed him.

  

Trending News

Business News

Hands on Preview of the Samsung Galaxy S III
Morgan Stanley bomb: Predicts India's 2012 GDP at 5.7% "Morgan Stanley bomb: Predicts India's 2012 GDP at 5.7%"

Modi stays away from Advani, meets Vajpayee

CNBC-TV18 Exclusive Anand Sharma Says To Reassure Foreign Investors About Investments In India

The latest earning numbers FIRST on CNBC-TV18
Videos

Jun 1 2012, 14:57

Delisting candidates are risky; be cautious: SMC

- in MARKET OUTLOOK

Jun 1 2012, 11:57

Raamdeo Agrawal lauds Q4 nos, sees drastic rate cuts ahead

- in MARKET OUTLOOK

Interviews

Jun 1 2012, 15:36 | Source: CNBC-TV18

M&M performed well on strategy, not fuel prices: Nayer  

Jun 1 2012, 11:29 | Source: CNBC-TV18

HDIL eyes revenues of Rs 2500 cr in FY13  

Subscribe to

Moneycontrol Newsletters

Moneycontrol.com offers you a choice of various sectoral and other newsletters for FREE!