The Olympic Games have displaced more
than 2 million people in the last 20 years, mostly minorities such as the
homeless and poor, a rights group said Tuesday.
Some 1.5 million people will have
been displaced by the Beijing Games alone, according to a report by the
Geneva-based Center on Housing Rights and Evictions.
``Our research shows that little has
changed since 1988 when 720,000 people were forcibly displaced in Seoul,
South Korea, in preparation for the Summer Olympic Games,'' said Jean du
Plessis, COHRE's executive director. ``It is shocking and entirely
unacceptable that 1.25 million people have already been displaced in
Beijing
, in preparation for the 2008 Games, in flagrant violation of their right
to adequate housing.''
The Chinese Foreign Ministry rejected
the figures as ``groundless.''
Some 6,037 households have been
demolished since 2002 to make way for nine venues in the process of
preparing for the 2008 Olympic Games, spokeswoman Jiang Yu said.
``Those citizens have received cash
compensation and been properly resettled. Not one single household has
been forced to move out of
Beijing
,'' Jiang said.
IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies told
The Associated Press that the study ``touches upon a very important
subject,'' and that the IOC planned to attend a COHRE workshop addressing
the issue June 14-15.
``We want to dialogue fully with them
and the UN to understand the figures more fully,'' Davies said. ``We'd
like to get a better understanding of the issues and see what
international norms and UN standards exist that could serve as guidelines
for governments in the future.''
The three-year study covered seven
past and future Olympic host cities - Seoul, Barcelona, Atlanta, Sydney,
Athens, Beijing and London.
The report, titled ``Fair Play for
Housing Rights: Mega-Events, Olympic Games and Housing Rights,'' also
examines other major international events such as the soccer World Cup,
World Expos, IMF/World Bank conferences and even beauty pageants such as
the Miss World and Miss Universe contests.
The study says that large-scale
events often lead to rising housing costs, resulting in forced evictions,
displacement and criminalization of homelessness.
Five years ahead of the London 2012
Olympics, more than 1,000 people face the threat of displacement from
their homes, while housing prices are escalating, the study said.
The report said organizers of the
2010 Vancouver Games had vowed to respect housing rights, but preparations
already have led to the loss of 700 low-income housing units and the
conversion of inexpensive housing into tourist accommodations has
displaced hundreds of poor and elderly.
Past games were often worse:
- For the 1988 Olympics in
Seoul
, 720,000 people were forcibly evicted from their homes and homeless
people were rounded up and detained in facilities outside the city, the
report said. Development and urbanization led to unaffordable housing.
- Leading up to the 1992 Barcelona
Olympics, more than 400 families were displaced to make room for the
Olympic Village, 20 families were evicted from the site of the Olympic
stadium and 200 other families were displaced for the construction of ring
roads. Housing prices and rents increased 139 and 149 percent respectively
during the six-year period before the games and the lack of affordable
housing forced low-income earners out of the city.
- For the 1996 Atlanta Games, some
30,000 poor residents were displaced due to gentrification. About 2,000
public housing units were demolished. Legislation was introduced to
criminalize homelessness, the report said.
- Legislative measures also were
introduced ahead of the 2004 Athens Olympics to simplify the expropriation
of private property. Hundreds of Roma were evicted from their settlements.
- Because the main sporting complex
for the 2000 Sydney Games was built on surplus government wasteland, no
one was directly evicted or displaced for those games. But the city's
gentrification led to house prices more than doubling between 1996 and
2003. Rents soared 40 percent, forcing many to move to the city's fringe.
The study was undertaken in
partnership with the Geneva International Academic Network, the
U.N.
Center
for Human Settlements known as HABITAT, the Special Adviser to the UN
Secretary General on Sport for Development and Peace, and the
New York
University
Law
School
among others.
For the full report, click
here.
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