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| Information
for the visitor of the Olympics 2004 in Athens |
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| Athens 2004 Security |
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Olympic security is the responsibility
of the Hellenic Police (Ministry of Public Order) and specifically of
the Olympic Games Security Division (OGSD) – a special police unit
created for the 2004 Olympic Games that reports directly to the Chief
of Police and is staffed by Police, Coast Guard, Fire-Brigade and Defense
Forces personnel. |
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| ATHENS 2004 and the OGSD
are working with the Olympic Advisory Group (OAG), a seven-nation task
force with extensive experience in the security planning of large sport
events, including the Olympic Games. The seven nations are Australia,
France, Germany, Israel, Spain, the UK and the US. The OAG meets regularly
to discuss planning, technology and training issues. |
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| Olympic and Paralympic Village |
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The Olympic and Paralympic Village is
located at the foot of Parnitha, a mountain situated in the Municipality
of Acharnes, close to the centre of Athens and covers an area of 1,240
square meters. The Olympic Village will host 16,000 athletes during the
Olympic Games, and 6,000 athletes during the Paralympics, who will reside
in buildings equipped for people with special needs. Upon completion of
the Games in 2004, the Workers' Housing Organization (OEK), which is responsible
for the construction of the project, will use these houses to accommodate
its beneficiaries. |
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- Greece has budgeted US$800 million for Olympic security infrastructure
and equipment and assigned some 50,000 security personnel to the games
(3 times as many as in Sydney and Salt Lake City).
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- Greece is receiving counsel by the Olympic Advisory Group, including
security experts from US, Israel, Britain, France, Germany, Spain and
Australia.
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- NATO agreed to provide air-cover with AWACS aircrafts during the Games
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- There are talks between Athens and International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) for help in detecting and heading off a potential dirty bomb
attack. USA provided IAEA with $500,000 for radiation detectors to be
used at the Olympic events. Radiation detectors (portable and fixed)
will also be installed at several locations, focusing on border crossings.
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The Olympic village, the Media villages and the
technical officials villages, as well as Olympic Hotels and the Port
of Piraeus, where floating hotels will be moored, are accommodation
facilities where high- level security measures will be deployed. To
this end, an independent Olympic Village Security Command Centre has
been planned, equipped with state-of-the-art security systems. The
Olympic village in particular, will be surrounded by twin concrete
barriers and secured with cameras and X-ray machines.
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- Special attention is paid to the protection of the Olympic family
and the VIPs. The security measures that will be deployed consist of
general measures (policing the Olympic road network, venue security
and monitoring, capacity to quickly respond to incidents etc), and special
measures (close personal protection, site inspections, advance escorts,
airspace protection etc)
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- Traffic management will be conducted at a fully equipped centre, the
Traffic Monitoring and Control Operation room, according to a special
plan that provides a series of traffic and security measures.
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- Olympic security planning also includes guarding of vital installations,
such as power stations, water works, telecommunications installations,
as well as oil and natural gas installations.
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| Olympic security measures also include: |
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border surveillance (from land and sea, combining
operations of the Defense forces, Coast Guard, Border Guards and Police
personnel, increased passport and custom controls),
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air space protection (flight safety reinforcement,
airspace surveillance, banning flights over specific areas, air medical
evacuation, fire–fighting, etc.),
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terrorist activities response (a special anti-terrorist
plan, a crisis management system, an intelligence network and rapid
response units are established, accordingly trained),
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CBRN threats response ( a plan for dealing with
chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats has been developed,
with the assistance of experts from countries participating in the
Olympic Advisory Group).
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The Olympic Intelligence Centre will be the agency
for collection, registration, synthesis, analysis, and assessment
of Intelligence of Olympic interest, and will be responsible for final
threat assessment. It is sharing intelligence with 150 countries and
international organizations.
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A workforce of 41,000 will be involved in Olympic
security, including 21,000 police officers, 3,300 coast guard officers,
1,400 fire corps personnel, 7,000 special forces, 2,800 private companies
security personnel, and 5,600 security volunteers. This workforce
is trained through programs targeting in different security issues,
and provided by experts from the OAG countries. In particular, the
US, Britain, France and Spain have trained thousands of Greek police
officers in matters of terrorism and explosives. The Israelis have
handled training regarding suicide bombers.
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The evaluation of security mechanisms will be conducted
through exercises, with the participation of all parties and agencies
involved. Seven major exercises have already been conducted, as well
as a large number of smaller scale exercises.
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- Two major Olympic security exercises took place from February 6 to
8, and in mid-March. They will be observed by the Olympic Security Group,
and will be geared to prevent, among others, an attack by weapons of
mass destruction. Both exercises will involve the police, military,
health services and other agencies.
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- Olympic safety planning is supported by state of the art equipment,
including border surveillance systems, mobile port facilities surveillance
systems, port security systems, mobile crisis management centres, helicopters,
aircrafts, high speed water crafts, fire-fighting vessels, physical
security systems, traffic police equipment, IT systems, equipment for
CBRN threat response etc
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- The planning described is the result of cooperation with experts in
national and international level. The latter includes the National Olympic
Committees, the International Olympic Committee, different countries
and International Organizations, and particularly the Olympic Advisory
Group.
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| Sources:
The Greek Ministry of Public Order / Athens 2004 Organising Committee
for the Olympic Games |
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