Games won't solve our problems: residents
Sep 13, 2017 - 8:39 PM As French officials uncorked the champagne to celebrate securing the 2024 Olympics, in Saint-Denis, the underprivileged district just north of Paris where much of the Games will be hosted, not everyone was preparing to party.After three failed bids and the withdrawal of its chief rival Los Angeles, Paris was chosen on Wednesday to host the summer Games seven years from now.
"All of France is behind #Paris2024, to welcome the world!" Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo said on Twitter. But a dozen kilometres north of her town hall, in Saint-Denis, some are not so sure.
Despite promises of jobs and better public transport for the small city that will host the opening and closing ceremonies, the athletes' village and many sporting events, there is scepticism about any potential windfall.
"It might be a good thing for those with enough money to buy tickets, and for bar owners nearby, but that's it," said Lucette Menage, 46, a local caregiver.
"The Olympics won't solve our problems, they won't put an end to all the poverty in the banlieues," she said, referring to Paris's poor outskirts.
Unemployment in Saint-Denis is at 23 per cent, more than twice the national average. The city of 115,000, cut in half by a network of highways, is part of France's poorest department, Seine-Saint-Denis.
There has been long-standing criticism that hosting the Olympics - while an honour and an opportunity for vast investment - too often fails to benefit the most needy.
In Rio de Janeiro, in particular, favela residents were pushed out of their homes to make way for infrastructure for last year's Games, while new transport networks mainly helped wealthier areas.
Marine Massot Capone, an urban planner who moved to Saint-Denis from Paris three years ago for the cheaper rent, is looking forward to better train stations. But that is not enough.
"I don't think the Olympics will do much to stem steep poverty here," she said as she shopped in a local street market.
The Games have their supporters in Saint-Denis, including Sid Ouldmoussa, who owns a restaurant opposite the cathedral. During events such as the 1998 World Cup, with games played at the Saint-Denis Stade de France, turnover doubled, he said.
But Celine Zenou, a 27-year-old resident, said what she wanted from authorities was clean streets, not the Olympics.
"They should first get started on cleaning all this," she said, "Saint-Denis is a trash can."
Source: AAP
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