Blast, bullet in troubled start for Games

Blast, bullet in troubled start for Games

August 07, 2016
Spectators queue at the entrance of the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro ahead of the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games Friday. — AFP
Spectators queue at the entrance of the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro ahead of the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games Friday. — AFP

RIO DE JANEIRO — The Rio Olympics got off to a troubled start Saturday as a loud blast erupted near the cycling race's finish line and a bullet ripped through the media tent at the equestrian venue.

Long queues also formed outside venues — as competition went on inside — as volunteers and security staff struggled to cope with a sudden influx of fans.

Brazilian military carried out a controlled explosion near the Copacabana finish line of Rio Olympics men's road cycling race Saturday, witnesses said.

Military bomb disposal experts were at the scene of the explosion and kept crowds away with police.

The explosion stunned crowds gathering for the end of the race. The race leaders were about 100 kilometers away at the time.

Elsewhere at the Deodoro venue, onlookers were shocked when a bullet pierced the temporary venue housing media, leaving visible holes in the fabric roof and wall.

It made for an unsettling day one of the Rio Games, which were launched in a blaze of color by Friday's flamboyant opening ceremony.

But in further violence Friday, police gunned down a mugger outside the ceremony venue, the Maracana stadium, and a woman was shot and killed by armed assailants near the Olympic Boulevard.

The events overshadowed a busy opening day of action in which little-known American teenager Virginia Thrasher became the first gold-medalist, in the women's 10m air rifle, the first of 306 medal events.

Serbian rowers Milos Vasic and Nenad Bedik capsized in choppy waters at the Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon, while Iran's Ghader Mizbani suffered a terrifying crash in the cycling race.

At Olympic Park, the Games' hub, fans complained bitterly over transport and logistical problems which soured their experience on a sweltering day in Rio.

"We were caught like sardines in the bus and there are huge queues here," said Adriana Barbosa who travelled to Rio de Janeiro from Sao Paulo for the weekend.

Rio Olympics spokesman Mario Andrada apologized for the long queues and admitted the tournament needed to raise its game.

"Indeed we have problems on some venues especially in the Olympic Park," he said. "We apologize to everybody who is standing under the sun and in lines outside of venues.

"We need to upgrade that part of the game. We moved people from Rio 2016 to speed up the mag and bag (checks) and within the next hours we will be in much better shape."

Golds were also on offer in weightlifting, archery, fencing and judo, while rugby made its return to the Olympic program after a gap of 92 years.

Camille Grassineau scored the first try of the tournament — and the first ever Olympic try in rugby's sevens format — as France's women beat Spain 24-7.


August 07, 2016
HIGHLIGHTS