Air pollution forces star to pull out of Olympic marathon
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
One of the world's top long distance runners has said he will not compete in
the marathon at the Beijing Olympics because China's air pollution would
pose an unacceptable risk to his health and future career.
In a major blow for the Chinese authorities, who have spent vast sums of
money trying to tackle Beijing's pollution problem, the world record holder,
Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia, said he still intended to participate in the
10,000 metres but could not run in the 26-mile, 385-yard (42.2km) marathon.
Gebrselassie, 34, who holds the world marathon record and two Olympic titles
for the 10,000 metres, suffers from asthma. "The pollution in China is a
threat to my health and it would be difficult for me to run 42km," he told
Reuters. "But I am not pulling out of the Olympic event in Beijing
altogether. I plan to participate in the 10,000-metre event."
The decision by such a high-profile athlete not to participate in an event
because of pollution clearly hit a raw nerve with the Chinese authorities
who briefly suspended transmissions from BBC World yesterday when the
station relayed the story to its domestic listeners.
China has spent more than £8bn on measures to improve air quality in Beijing
but has hadlittle tangible success. Factories have been closed or moved and
millions of cars have been taken off the city's notoriously congested roads
in the past 12 months. But a report by the United Nations in October
revealed that there still might not be enough time to clear pollutants for
the Games, which begin in August.
Gebrselassie's agent, Jos Hermans, said yesterday that part of the reason
behind his client's decision to pull out of the marathon was his
determination to improve upon his current world record. Gebrselassie is one
of only five men in history to run a marathon in under two hours six minutes
and stormed into the record books last year after running the Berlin
marathon in just 2 hours, 4 minutes and 26 seconds, 29 seconds faster than
the previous world record.
"His dream is to run in 2 hours and 3 minutes and to be the first to do
that," said Mr Hermans. "It's more important for him than to win another
gold medal."
China's Olympics have been dogged by concerns from athletes over air
pollution and from human rights campaigners. Last month, the authorities in
Beijing were forced into a frantic public relations damage-limitation
exercise after the film director Steven Spielberg stepped down as an
artistic adviser to the opening and closing ceremonies in protest at
Beijing's support for the Sudanese government and Khartoum's involvement in
the Darfur genocide.
Gebrselassie's comments are likely to reignite the debate over whether
Beijing, one of the world's most polluted cities, is a suitable venue for
the Olympics. Last year, Jacques Rogge, the president of the International
Olympic Committee, suggested that some endurance events might have to be
postponed if pollution was particularly bad. The British Olympics
Association, meanwhile, tested pollution masks developed by Brunel
University in the summer but has yet to decide whether it will encourage
athletes to use them at the Games.
Asthma and athletes
Many athletes who suffer from asthma have won Olympic medals. The condition
is no bar to sporting success.
The British marathon runner Paula Radcliffe was diagnosed with asthma at 14
and keeps the condition under control with medication. Paul Scholes, the
England footballer, found out he had asthma at the age of 21. But gulping in
large volumes of polluted air in Beijing will challenge even the healthiest
lungs.
The International Olympic Committee is concerned at the rise in athletes
claiming to be asthmatic – from 9 per cent in the 1980s to 21 per cent at
the 2000 Olympics. It will insist the correct tests are carried out and the
proper forms filled in before granting permission for athletes to use asthma
drugs.