8:56 am today

Olympics security to be boosted after pitch invasion

8:56 am today
A member of security holds a fan after numerous Morocco's fans invaded the pitch at the end of the men's group B football match against Argentina during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in Saint-Etienne.

A member of security holds a fan after numerous Morocco's fans invaded the pitch at the end of the men's group B football match against Argentina during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in Saint-Etienne. Photo: ARNAUD FINISTRE/AFP

Paris Olympics organisers said they would boost security at the Games and ensure security staff are available and well trained after a pitch invasion at a soccer match between Argentina and Morocco on Thursday.

Organisers said the incident during the opening match of the football tournament - in which security staff chased fans around the pitch at Saint-Etienne Stadium - had not posed a major security risk and that lessons would be learned.

"We do not minimise the events of yesterday," Olympics security director Bruno Le Ray told reporters, adding that additional staff and crowd barriers would be brought in for upcoming matches at Saint-Etienne, where access to the pitch is easier than at other stadiums.

Le Ray said that on average 17,000 agents would secure some 40 competition sites and some 100 non-competitive sites such as the Olympic Village, training facilities and hotels.

On the busiest days, this would increase to 22,000 staff. Staffing levels depend on the sports, with more than 1000 agents deployed for major team sports events, but a fraction of that for individual sports like athletics.

Le Ray said that while police will take care of security outside the Olympic venues, security inside will be handled by organisers, who have contracts with over 110 security firms.

He said contracting sufficient security staff had been a challenge at recent Olympic Games, especially since the Covid pandemic, when many security agents looked for jobs elsewhere.

In order to mitigate the no-show risk - sometimes 10 to 30 percent of staff do not show up for work - organisers have asked companies to identify up to 15 percent more agents.

He acknowledged organisers had struggled to find sufficient female staff to screen female spectators, but said that technology would help.

"Using metal detectors, male security staff can control female spectators without the need for touch," he said.

Equipment such as barriers, cameras and detectors account for just under half of the Paris Olympics' 320 million euro (NZ$590 million) security budget, with the rest mainly for staff.

- Reuters

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