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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

‘Hundreds of thousands’ will get free tickets for Paris 2024 Olympics opening ceremony

"Hundreds of thousands" of people will be able to watch the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics for free, organisers have said amid ongoing criticism about the price of tickets for next year's event.

'Hundreds of thousands' will get free tickets for Paris 2024 Olympics opening ceremony
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera and Organising Committee President Tony Estanguet during the signing of the protocol for the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games. (Photo by Geoffroy Van der Hasselt / AFP)

The final figure for the number of people who will be granted tickets for the vast and ambitious outdoor opening ceremony along the river Seine is still under discussion.

“Hundreds of thousands,” French interior Minister Gérald Darmanin told a press conference when questioned about the number of people. “It will depend on the weather and the publicity you do for it.”

Around 100,000 tickets will be sold for exclusive river-side positions, with organisers initially saying another 500,000 would be given an opportunity to watch from higher positions on roads above the Seine.

Athletes are set to sail down the river in a flotilla of 115 boats, the first time the opening ceremony for the Olympics has taken place outside of the athletics stadium.

“With its open and public nature, this ceremony will enable hundreds of thousands of people to see it for free,” Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo told the same press conference with Darmanin and Games chief Tony Estanguet.

With demand far outstripping supply, Paris 2024 organisers have faced a stream of criticism online and even from some athletes over the price of tickets, which first went on sale in February and March.

A second release, which began on May 11, has led to outrage over prices as high as €2,700 for the paying positions for the opening ceremony.

“I’m not even sure that my family will be able to come to see me, it’s so expensive,” Belgium’s Nafissatou Thiam, a two-time Olympic heptathlon champion, told Belgian media DH recently.

The ceremony also poses a huge security challenge for French organisers, with around 10,000 athletes taking part and 200 heads of state set to attend in addition to the huge crowds on the river banks.

Around 37,000 members of the security forces would be on duty for the opening ceremony, Darmanin said, with summer holidays cancelled for police over the period of the Games which will run from July 26th to August 11th.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 private security agents are also being recruited for the opening ceremony.

Darmanin stressed drones were considered the biggest security threat, but he added air defence technology was available and would be trialed later this year during the Rugby World Cup in France.

“It’s a new threat. It’s not certain that anything will happen but it is certainly the most difficult to prepare for,” he said.

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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

Airbnb promises to combat sex work in rentals during Paris Games

Airbnb on Friday agreed with French authorities to step up the fight against rentals on its platform being used for sex work during the Paris Olympics this summer and beyond.

Airbnb promises to combat sex work in rentals during Paris Games

The home rental platform signed a convention with MIPROF, a government organisation tasked with protecting women from violence, and fighting human trafficking, the French body said.

“Although such incidents are rare compared to the number of reservations, Airbnb commits, through this long-term collaboration, to supporting efforts made by the industry and the authorities to put an end to exploitation and human trafficking,” the platform said in a statement sent to AFP, saying it would pay close attention to the possible use of rented homes for sex work.

Among efforts to raise awareness among renters, Airbnb and MIPROF said they had compiled a “guide for the responsible traveller” to help them recognise signs of exploitation or human trafficking going on in the building or neighbourhood where they are staying.

MIPROF said it would dispatch teams to assist Airbnb, which in turn promised to strengthen its cooperation with police and the judiciary.

“This convention with Airbnb is major, given its central position in the tourism industry,” MIPROF’s secretary-general, Roxana Maracineanu, was quoted as saying in the statement.

Maracineanu, a former sports minister, had already warned at the end of last year that there was a “heightened risk” of human trafficking during the Olympics, and that the government needed to send a “clear and strong message” to traffickers.

Hotels were already vigilant concerning prostitution on their premises, she told AFP in December. She said the worry was “prostitution in homes, inside apartments”.

Police in several countries have identified a preference by sex workers and pimps for short-term rentals, including on Airbnb, because they offer more discretion than hotels.

Although prostitution remains legal in France, the purchase of sexual services was criminalised in 2016, allowing for the prosecution of clients. Pimping and brothels have been illegal for decades.

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