Skip to main content
Paris Olympics 2024

A dozen people excluded from Paris Olympic torch relay for drugs, Islamism

French security forces have rejected 13 people who were selected to take part in the torch relay for the Paris Olympics, including some who had committed drugs offences as well as a suspected Islamist, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said  Monday.

Designer Mathieu Lehanneur speaks at a press conference during the unveiling of the Paris 2024 Olympic torch's design,  25 July 2023.
Designer Mathieu Lehanneur speaks at a press conference during the unveiling of the Paris 2024 Olympic torch's design, 25 July 2023. REUTERS - PASCAL ROSSIGNOL
Advertising

Around 12,000 people have been vetted after being chosen for the 80-day relay across France which begins in Marseille on 8 May and will finish for the start of the Paris Games on 26 July.

"The vetting process has taken place and led to 13 incompatibility notices, meaning a very low rate of 0.10 percent," Darmanin told reporters at a press conference.

He said 10 were for people with "substantial criminal records, mostly for drugs offences", while three others were rejected by the intelligence services for "radical Islam, foreign interference, or links to the Russian-Ukrainian conflict."

The rejections "underline the efficiency of the vetting process and perhaps the plans of some people to disrupt the torch relay from the inside," he said.

The flame will be carried inside a "security bubble" of 100 travelling security forces, comprising motorbike teams, rapid-response forces, anti-drone specialists and anti-terror police.

Darmanin likened the relay through 400 towns to the annual Tour de France bicycle race but "with more originality and difficulties."

Security is to be bolstered by 15,000 military personnel and, at Olympic venues and fan zones, there will be between 17,000 and 22,000 private security guards.

Activists represent 'significant threat'

He said security forces were on permanent alert for potential terror threats but remained principally concerned by the risk of environmental groups seeking to use the event for publicity.

Noting a video circulating online called "how to extinguish the Olympic flame," he added that activist groups were "a very significant threat and we need to take it seriously."

The torch will be lit in Olympia in Greece, then brought by boat to the southern French port of Marseille on May 8 in a three-masted 19th-century French tall ship called the Belum.

 

Some media reports have suggested it will finish atop the Eiffel Tower but event organisers are keeping its resting place for the duration of the Games a secret.

Olympic relays have been targeted by protesters in the past.

French police had to cut short the relay in Paris in 2008 and repeatedly extinguish the flame after protesters against China's human rights record demonstrated against the Beijing Games of that year.

15 million spectators are expected to attend the Paris Olympics (26 July to 11 August) and Paralympic Games (28 August to 8 September), according to forecasts by the Paris tourist office.

(with AFP)

Daily newsletterReceive essential international news every morning

Keep up to date with international news by downloading the RFI app

Share :
Page not found

The content you requested does not exist or is not available anymore.