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Commonwealth Games to start tomorrow

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Updated at: 2235 PST, Saturday, October 02, 2010

NEW DELHI: With nearly 6,000 athletes already in Delhi and hundreds more streaming in by the day, the Indian capital was putting the finishing touches to preparations for Commonwealth Games on Saturday.

The 12-day sports gathering for mostly former British colonies was in crisis a week ago.

The late scramble by the India government to salvage the $6 billion event might still not be enough to erase the public relations disaster of the last few weeks but the 19th Commonwealth Games can at least boast the most participants.

"The fact that we will have the participation of 6,800 athletes and team officials from all 71 nations and territories indicates the love they have for India," said chief organizer Suresh Kalmadi.

"We are on course to deliver the Games successfully and smoothly."

The late arriving athletes will land in a city in the grip of huge security operation aimed at ensuring the safety of the athletes and spectators, 60,000 of whom will pack the refurbished Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium on Sunday.

Some 100,000 security personnel have been deployed around the city and MiG fighters and helicopter gunships will be on standby.

The Delhi government has also ordered shops and commercial establishments to remain closed on Sunday but the city's police chief YS Dadwal said people would still be able to get around.

"It's huge task and we have cancelled leave for all policemen," he told reporters. "It's a moment of great challenge for Delhi Police.

"We have not asked people to stay home. We told them, 'Plan your movement because of limited road space during the Games.

Reach venues well in advance and be prepared to stand in queues.'"

Britain's Prince Charles arrived in Delhi on Saturday to attend the opening ceremony on behalf of his mother, Queen Elizabeth, the head of the Commonwealth.

The Delhi Games, intended to showcase India's growing financial clout with a display of soft power, had threatened to become a national embarrassment before the government intervened.

The organisers had seven years to prepare but the shoddy construction and ****** accommodation forced some of the teams to either postpone their arrival or put up in city hotels.


The director of sport for the Canadian team, Scott Stevenson, said conditions in the athletes' village had now improved.

"We wanted it to get to adequate class as we say, which is where we are," he said. "So people are comfortable, they are getting their sleep, eating well and it's easy to move around. It is a comfortable village to be around."

The string of top athletes who have skipped the games for fatigue, injury, health or security concerns have taken some of the lustre off the sporting competition, which starts on Monday.

Strong swimming teams from Australia, England, South Africa and Canada have bucked the trend, though, and the action at the Dr SP Mukherjee Aquatic Complex will be among the highlights of the Oct. 3-14 event.

"It is very different from the swimming world championships and in my view the only experience that beats competing at the Commonwealth Games is the Olympics," said South Africa's 2004 Olympic champion Roland Schoeman.

Corruption charges, an attack by suspected militants that wounded two tourists, a dengue fever epidemic, a f!lthy Games Village and the collapse of a footbridge have tarnished India's image, questioning its ability to host events of such magnitude.

Commonwealth Games to start tomorrow
 
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After all the drama its finally all set and happening ....phew ! .....really hope the Indian Boxing contingent .....the wrestling , shooting , tennis and the Badminton ones garner a cartload of medals .....this will be a test for our swimming contingent .....let us see how much Khade has improved after his performance in Beijing ......as of now our rowing and swimming teams still lag behind western nations by a considerable margin....
 
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Can flaws in India Commonwealth Games spark reform?
Can flaws in India Commonwealth Games spark reform? - CSMonitor.com

A bright, young sports medicine doctor, Rajat Chauhan moved his family from London back to India four years ago so he could help his nation prepare for next week’s Commonwealth Games. But since then he has grown so disillusioned because of the missteps leading up to the games that he plans to take a vacation out of Delhi while it hosts the event.

“The problems [start] once the public sector enters in in any way,” says Dr. Chauhan. “Here, the culture of politics is so bad. It’s just about making money here, and if they are not corrupt, they are simply incompetent.”

Like Chauhan, many Indian citizens are hopping mad over the problems that have marred preparations for the Games. They are supposed to showcase India as an emerging player on the international stage, but allegations of corruption among the organizers, missed deadlines, and shoddy construction of venues have sent a different message abroad.

Among the many embarrassments, so far: a collapsing footbridge, an athletes' village too ****** and incomplete to house early arrivals, and an audit that found safety tests at various sporting venues were fudged.
Contradictions in modern India

At home, the Games have highlighted a growing contradiction about modern India. Even as its companies compete aggressively in the global marketplace, the country’s public sector remains “third world,” with a creaking bureaucracy and crooked politicians.

“Very soon I believe there will be a public anger outburst against politicians who are mismanaging everything in India, including sports,” says Yashwant Deshmukh, an Indian pollster. “They didn’t involve the rest of India [in the Games]. They wanted to keep it for themselves so they could make money off it.”

Still, many Indians like Chauhan wanted to get involved. He had already served on the Cricket World Cup committee and faced a choice: Stay in London for the 2012 Olympics or head to Delhi for the Commonwealth Games.

“I thought I could make a far bigger difference in Delhi, because I saw there was no one,” he says.

So he came to India, started up a rare sports medicine department at a private hospital, and offered to train doctors in the field to service the Games. His outreach went nowhere. Instead, at a medical conference in 2007, a top Games official took to criticizing private sector efforts.

“I offered him help in any form whatsoever. He and other senior officials got agitated as how could a 30-something year old kid comment on such important issues. He told me to sit down and email him, which I did right there. Not surprisingly, I never heard back from them,” says Chauhan.

Years later, as deadlines for the Games loomed with almost no sports medicine doctors on hand, Chauhan received numerous e-mail pleas – shown to this reporter – to come volunteer. Officials ultimately turned to government doctors to staff the venues, none of who have formal training in sports medicine, according to PSM Chandran, president of the Indian Federation of Sports Medicine.

The chief medical officer for the Games, Bharat Inder Singh, says his committee decided to focus more on getting specialists in injuries that are likely to come up in a given sport. Dr. Chandran counters that such doctors will be slower since they don’t know the patterns of injury in each sport.

Dr. Singh says he gave up a lucrative private practice for the chance to serve his nation. He acknowledges that private help was turned back because the Delhi government was “very firm” in keeping control over medical services for the Games. Delhi rejected an offer from an Indian-American medical team to work for free. “I suppose there was a lot of pride involved in it,” he says.
A clash between young and old

Chauhan’s situation reflects the clash between a younger India’s belief in meritocracy and the rigid hierarchies of the government. But even the eldest Indians say the Games are an indictment of the country’s governance.

“India is a strong country with a weak government,” says U.V. Joshi, an elderly retired civil servant from the state of Maharashtra. “The administrative system which worked nicely under the British has gone awry now. It has to be repaired if India is to progress.”

He’s old enough to remember the political leaders who won independence for India.

“They were self-effacing, self-sacrificing leaders. But immediately after that, they became hungry for self-propagation. And now, with globalization and commercialization this has gone beyond tolerable limits,” he says. “It’s a crisis of character.”

Indeed, 162 of the 543 members of Parliament have criminal records. It’s enough to make some Indians – who constantly look over at China’s ability to churn out massive public projects – to question democracy.

But for Anil Bairwal, the national coordinator for the Association for Democratic Reforms, the blame for bad politicians lies not in India’s democracy, but the total lack of democracy within its political parties.

“The [electoral] law needs to change, but the lawbreakers are the lawmakers and they don’t want to change the law,” says Mr. Bairwal.
A opportunity for reforms?

Some Indians see momentum for reform given the painful exposure of the problem.

“It makes a lot of people in the country question this soft underbelly [of corruption] and to say, ‘Hey, we are doing so well in every other sphere, why should we not fix this?’” says Harish Bijoor, a brand and business strategy consultant in Bangalore.

The long-term solution, he says, is for more captains of industry, scientists, sportsmen, and other leaders across Indian life to go into politics. At the moment, the grandchildren of those who led India’s freedom struggle dominate the political class.

Most Indians still hold out hope that the Games, which run from Sunday through Oct. 14, will come together at the last moment.

“In the end, we will make it,” says Mr. Joshi, the retired civil servant. But he also worries a bit about that: “If we succeed, we will clap our backs and we’ll neglect the corruption aspect.”

India will be able to reform.
 
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