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One month to go: Will Rio be ready? (2)

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2016-07-05 10:26Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping
This file photo shows a Christmas tree at Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Dec. 15, 2014. The Rio 2016 Olympic Games will be held from August 5 to 21. (Photo/Xinhua)

This file photo shows a Christmas tree at Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Dec. 15, 2014. The Rio 2016 Olympic Games will be held from August 5 to 21. (Photo/Xinhua)

SECURITY

Days after Dornelles declared a financial emergency, the federal government agreed toprovide the state with 850 million US dollars in emergency funds to guarantee security during the Games.

Brazil plans to deploy 85,000 soldiers and police during the Olympics, about double the number used at the London 2012 Games.

Earlier this year Rio's state government cut 550 million US dollars from its Olympic security budget, but denied the move posed a risk to safety.

In May, Dornelles issued a request for the federal government to deploy national armed forces in the city's streets as part of a 15,000-strong military contingent during the Games.

Brazil has also launched an awareness campaign designed to foil possible terror plots during the mega-event.

The initiative involves the distribution of brochures, posters and booklets explaining how to identify people engaging in suspicious activity.

In June the government said Brazil's intelligence agencies were working alongside counterparts in the United States, England, France, Israel and Russia to counter the threat of terrorism.

POLLUTION

Sailing's international governing body Word Sailing has said that it is satisfied with efforts to clean Rio's much-maligned Guanabara bay.

The city government last year admitted it will not be able to fulfil a 2009 pledge to reduce pollution in the bay by 80% before the Olympics.

But large nets that block the flow of waste into competition areas and eco-boats that scoop up trash from the water's surface will ensure the bay is fit for sailing, according to officials.

After his May visit to Rio, World Sailing CEO Andy Hunt said the bay's water quality was "noticeably better" within the Olympic sailing routes.

A cleanup operation at the the Rodrigo de Freitas lake has also eased pollution concerns for rowing and canoeing events, according to organizers.

LEGACY

Rio 2016 chief Carlos Arthur Nuzman has said that the Olympics will have the same transformative effect on Rio that the 1992 Games had on Barcelona.

Among the infrastructure projects that have coincided with the Games are a port revamp, tram and subway lines, roads and express bus services.

Meanwhile some Rio 2016 event venues will be turned into public schools, public sports facilities and leisure centers, according to officials.

But the immediate post-Games challenge for the city and state governments will be to recover Rio's financial health amid sinking tax revenue from the struggling oil industry.

Many providers of essential services like hospitals and police are on the cusp of collapse as public funds dry up and civil servants wait to be paid.

 

  

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