MillenniumPost
World

UK to deploy 17,000 troops for Olympics

Nearly 17,000 British troops will be deployed for the upcoming Olympics to back up a grand security arrangement that includes surface-to-air missiles on rooftops amidst concerns of an Al-Qaeda threat.

In a last minute manoeuvre, ‘the military has been asked to provide up to 3,500 extra troops to guard the London Olympics, amid concerns that private security firm G4S will be unable to deliver the number of staff it promised’, The Guardian newspaper reported on Thursday.

It said ministers have been forced into the ‘last-ditch move’ only a fortnight before the Games because they are concerned that the private firm cannot guarantee it will be able to supply the 13,700 guards it was contracted to deliver.

‘The army will provide an insurance policy,’ an unnamed source was quoted as saying by the daily.

The armed forces are already providing up to 13,500 personnel for the Games split between the venues and back-up for police. Under the contingency plans, this could reach 16,500, 7,000 more than are being deployed in Afghanistan, it said.

Among the other security arrangements, the navy’s biggest warship, HMS Ocean, will be stationed in the Thames and four Typhoon fighter jets will be on standby at RAF Northolt in Middlesex. Armed Puma helicopters will also be on standby.

G4S said it had 4,000 staff in venues and more than 20,000 in training. A spokesman for G4S said that issues over ‘scheduling and deployment’ were being dealt with.

‘Our programme to train and deploy our security workforce for the 2012 Games is continuing and has stepped up in the past few weeks,’ said the spokesman. ‘Issues we have faced over scheduling and deployment are being worked out and we are continuing to work hard to get a robust workforce in place for the start of the Games,’ he was quoted as saying by the daily.


GAMES PUT PRESSURE ON BRITISH INTELLIGENCE

The forthcoming Olympics have placed British intelligence services under ‘unprecedented pressure’ this year, according to the Intelligence and Security Committee [ISC] that examines the policy, administration and expenditure of the three services.

In its annual report released on Thursday, the ISC said that it recognised the ‘exceptional effort’ that had been required from the staff the intelligence services during the year preceding the Olympic Games.

The intelligence services had identified three potential sources of threat during the Olympics: ‘Al-Qaeda and its affiliate; Northern Ireland based Republican terrorist groups and clashes between rival groups or ethnicities that would be present in London during the Games.

Besides, the committee’s report said that the accreditation process for the Olympics increased pressure considerably. The process required all 540,000 applications from those working at the venues, as well as officials, volunteers and team members, to be checked against relevant databases.

The intelligence services also came under pressure due to ‘the need for extensive briefing of and liaison with foreign partners, as foreign intelligence services from the more than 200 nations represented at the Games are expected to send representatives with their delegations for co-ordination and security purposes’.
Next Story
Share it