
ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece — Workers are racing
against the clock to re-plant trees on ancient Olympia before
next month’s Beijing Games torch-lighting ceremony after the
area was devastated by last year’s forest fires.
Hundreds of thousands of acres of forest land
were torched during the blazes last August that left much of the
western Peloponnese in ashes and more than 65 people dead.
The site of the ancient Olympics and the
modern Games’ torch-lighting ceremony and relay did not escape
destruction. The once lush pine forests that hug the ancient
stadium and the popular archaeological site were left charred.
"Re-planting is already halfway done,"
Olympia mayor Giorgos Aidonis told Reuters recently. "As usual,
we started late but I am optimistic that by the end of February
the work will finish."
The Hellenic Olympic Committee recently
warned that Greece faced international embarrassment because of
re-forestation delays that would become visible in television
pictures beamed around the world during the ceremony on March
24.
The Games will be held in the Chinese capital
in August.
"We are rushing to be ready on time. More
than 27,000 plants and trees will be planted by the end of
February," Aidonis said.
Dozens of workers are now busy planting trees
on the eerily bare Kronios hill, once covered in wild
vegetation, above the ancient stadium.
Gardeners have planted young cypress trees
around the monument of the modern Games founder, Pierre de
Coubertin, in the academy compound. The white marble monument,
where his heart is buried, is the first stop of the first relay
runner after every ceremony.
Aidonis said the IOC has done nothing to
help.
"Absolutely nothing. They have not paid a
single penny," he said.
The IOC said funds were given to the Greek
Olympic Committee following the fires.
"A donation of $250,000 was made at the time
via the National Olympic Committee," an IOC official told
Reuters.
Local residents were also angry with what
they said was cosmetic work only for the ceremony.
"There are other areas nearby that suffered
even greater damage but there is no re-forestation going on
there," local worker Achilleas Passias said, watering seedlings
above the Coubertin monument.
"People died, people lost their homes and their livelihood so
they should be cared for and not only what TV cameras will show
during the torch lighting ceremony in March." —Reuters