The Fiji Times

Torch visit sparks anger

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WHEN a group of mayors paid tens of thousands of euros each to bring the Olympic torch to their towns along France’s Atlantic coast, a row erupted over whether the cost represente­d value for money at a time when public spending is under pressure.

Franck Louvrier, the conservati­ve mayor of La Baule-Escoublac, a wellheeled coastal resort in the western Loire Atlantique department which will host the torch on Wednesday for an overnight stop, said he hoped the ƞame’s arrival would “excite the taste buds” and boost offseason tourism.

But the resistance he and other Loire Atlantique mayors have met reƞects a broader French apathy about the upcoming Games, as well as concerns about the cost of hosting the Paris event.

In an interview in his ofƝce, overlookin­g La Baule’s yawning Atlantic bay, Louvrier said the 60,000 euros ($65,028.00) paid to the Paris Olympics Organising Committee (COJOP) had made little dent in the town’s roughly 60-millioneur­o annual budget.

“There was no credible argument for missing this global event,” said Louvrier in his glass corner office decorated with Playmobil Napoleons. “Refusing it would have been a major mistake for everyone.”

Nearly 40% of French people are indifferen­t about the Olympics, while 37% have a negative view of the Games, according to a May 31 Ifop poll. Less than a quarter of respondent­s were enthusiast­ic about the event, the survey showed, even if past Olympics suggest the mood will lift once the Games begin on July 26.

Not everyone in La Baule, home to some 17,000 people, cheered Louvrier’s decision.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Torchbeare­r Nicolas-Marie Daru holds the Olympics torch during the relay.
Picture: REUTERS Torchbeare­r Nicolas-Marie Daru holds the Olympics torch during the relay.

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