Fake volunteers hope to disrupt Paris Olympics
FILE PHOTO: Olympic rings to celebrate the IOC official announcement that Paris won the 2024 Olympic bid are seen in front of the Eiffel Tower at the Trocadero square in Paris, France, September 16, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
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An
anti-Olympics collective is aiming to disrupt next year's Paris Games by
recruiting fake volunteers.
Saccage
2024, which translates as Destruction 2024, has already generated a buzz on
social media with its "pseudo-volunteer" plan, saying they should be
paid for their work.
"Volunteering
is supposed to be for the common good and that is not the case for the Olympic
Games - it does not have charitable aims," Saccage 2024 member Arthur, who
declined to give his family name, told Reuters.
The
25-year-old, an environmental activist who lives in Saint-Denis, where the bulk
of the Games will be organised, plans to withdraw at the last minute or try to
disrupt the Games from within if he is selected to be a volunteer.
Saccage and
other critics of the Paris Olympics say the event will negatively impact the
environment and benefit big businesses and elites, rather than locals.
Paris 2024
organisers did not immediately respond to a request for comment but have said
in the past that they would organise "popular and spectacular Games"
that will bring in millions of visitors.
The Olympics
organisers are looking to recruit 45,000 volunteers. The organisers have said
that volunteering - also widely used in past Games - is an opportunity to
participate in the Olympics. The deadline for applications is May 3.
Paris
organisers said they would take the time to ensure the "sincerity" of
candidates and that volunteers would have a background check. Candidates are
required to demonstrate their motivation and experience, and there will be
interviews for some roles.
Volunteers
will receive uniforms, free travel and meal vouchers.
The Games
are more than a year away and there is no certainty activists will be able to
generate the numbers needed to disrupt events.
However, the
plan reflects a widespread discontent in France, with huge protests over a law
increasing the pension age and hashtags linking opposition to the reform and
the Olympics.
Saccage
could not say how many had signed up as would-be disruptors, but said it saw a
rise in interest after President Emmanuel Macron rammed through the pensions
law without a final vote in parliament.
Jan, a
library worker in his 50s, said he came across the idea on Twitter after
France's Constitutional Council verdict gave its green light to the law.
He had been
striking and protesting against the pensions law, and said the fake volunteer
plan was a "fun and constructive" way to continue the protests and,
at the same time, oppose the Games and their impact.
This would
not be the first time the Olympic Games have been used by activists to further
their causes, said Jules Boykoff, a political scientist at Oregon University.
"Money
spent on the Olympics is not spent on basic needs such as housing, education,
healthcare and pensions. The Games are a high-profile target for activist
ire," he said.


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