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    Then or now, safety is key
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2004-08-10 06:16

    Just as security is a big issue at the 2004 Olympics, which opens on Friday in Athens, it preoccupied officials in the Greek capital back in 1896, at the advent of the modern Games.

    The Athens police chief at the time was so worried that hordes of thieves who roamed the streets of the capital and kidnappers who operated around the country would disrupt the Games he asked them to declare an Olympic truce, mirroring the temporary break in hostilities observed by warring tribes in ancient Greece during the Olympics.

    At the start of 1896, the authorities in Athens learned from reliable sources that pickpockets from Istanbul, Cairo and Alexandria were preparing to invade the Greek capital to take advantage of "the good business opportunities" which the Olympics would provide for their deft fingers.

    Deft fingers

    But they weren't the only source of worry for those in charge of security. Few in Greece had forgotten the so-called "Marathon murders."That lurid case occurred in 1870, when three Britons were kidnapped and killed by Greek thieves.

    Robbery and kidnapping had become commonplace in Greece in the 1800s,so severely tarnishing the country's image that the government was forced to take tough measures against the thieves and hostage-takers.

    For the 1896 Games, an entire regiment of traditional Greek royal guards, Evzones, and two cavalry units were mobilized to provide security cover.

    The special security force numbered 400 men - a far cry from the 70,000 who will be on duty for the 2004 Games, but a considerable force for the time.

    The Athens' police force was granted a special allowance of 30,000 drachmas to allow it to beef itself up, Estia newspaper reported at the time. In comparison, an average ticket to the Olympics cost 1.3 drachmas.

    Police were sent from the provinces to the capital and were given special training in "how to behave with foreigners," the paper wrote.

    But despite the best efforts of the organizers and the government, the Athenian newspaper Asty said a few weeks before the 1896 Games opened in March that "the lives of visitors and their property are in danger in the streets of the capital."

    Athens police chief at the time, Dimitrios Bairaktaris, warned in an interview with Estia in February 1896 that "the flow of foreigners (into Athens) to celebrate the Games will doubtless bring with it numerous thieves and society dropouts, and only a good and severe police organization can result in a situation without danger."

    To achieve that end, Bairaktaris released Greek thieves from prison and held a mass meeting with them on the Pnyx, the hill that overlooks the Acropolis.

    There, he asked them, in the name of Greece's legendary hospitality and honour, to monitor the activities of their "colleagues" and to ensure the safety of foreign visitors.

    And if they refused, seeking instead to join their "colleagues" in a bit of light-fingered crime?

    Swift justice

    "Those who do not respect this decision will be beaten," warned the Police Review at the time.

    The threat of lashings and the honour of Greece were enough for the local thieves. They vowed on the Pnyx to do Bairaktaris' bidding, and the Games went off with neither attacks nor robberies.

    So proud was King George of the Greek's behaviour during the Olympics that he said in an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro: "Not one robbery was committed, not one pickpocket slipped into the crowd. Athens was protected by the probity of her people."

    But after the foreign visitors had left the capital, the lingering thieves and dropouts made up for lost time by preying on provincial Greeks who had decided to prolong their stay in Athens after the games.

    "After an entire week of exceptional security, they were like lambs to the slaughter at the hands of the thieves," the Police Review noted.



     
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