• JO JO2012 Jeux Olympiques Londres

    Profit and Security at the London Olympics

    http://www.globalpolicy.org/mercenary-companies/51783-profit-and-security-at-the-london-olympics.html

    By Tarak Barkawi,
    Al Jazeera
    July 17,2012

    G4S, the largest private security company in the world, fell short of providing an adequate number of security personnel for the London Olympics. The British Armed Forces are to fill in the void created by G4S. G4S’ failure to recruit sheds light on their underlying profit motive. G4S is doing less to pocket more, with little accountability. The privatization of security is in effect contributing to a ‘de-development’ of traditional government services.

    The British armed forces will have to provide an additional 3,500 for Olympic security on short notice [AFP]

    G4S - the Anglo-Danish conglomerate - has put the security of the London Olympics at risk. Or so it would seem according to recent headlines.

    The largest private security company in the world, G4S employs over 650,000 people in 125 countries. But the news broke last week that it could not provide the 13,000 security guards it had promised for the Olympics.

    Britain’s muckraking journalists responded with aplomb. The papers abounded with stories of inept trainees asleep in classes or lacking in English. Other would-be security guards failed to spot pistols, bombs and grenades.

  • “Drones, Missiles, and Gunships, Oh My!” Welcome to the 2012 London Olympics
    http://www.globalpolicy.org/mercenary-companies/51603-drones-missiles-and-gunships-oh-my-welcome-to-the-2012-london-ol

    There will be as many as 48,000 security forces in London during the 2012 Summer Olympics. These forces will be armed with surface-to-air missiles, sonic weapons, surveillance drones, attack dogs, an eleven-mile electric fence, facial-recognition CCTV systems, and other high-tech security apparatuses. It is the UK’s biggest mobilization of military forces since World War II. The author of this article argues that the whole ordeal is not as much about athletes competing within a community of nations, as it is a “neoliberal Trojan Horse” aimed to attract investments at the expense of basic civil liberties.

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