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    4
    Jan
    2013
    8:34am, EST

    Two-time Olympian killed after bike is struck by minibus in South Africa

    Jacques Boissinot / AP file

    Burry Stander, seen here in 2010, was hailed as a "South African icon and sporting great" by Oscar Pistorius.

     

    By NBC News wire services

    JOHANNESBURG - One of the world's top mountain bikers died Thursday after being hit by a minibus taxi while training on a coastal road.

    Burry Stander, 25, narrowly missed out on a medal at the London Olympics, coming in fifth in the men's cross country event. He also finished 15th at the Beijing Games.

    The South African was a former under-19 and under-23 world champion.

    Police said Stander was killed on Thursday while cycling alone. He died at the scene of the accident in Shelly Beach, about 75 miles southwest of Durban.

    'Ultra-competitive'
    "The taxi driver allegedly stopped after the accident until the arrival of the police. No arrest has been made at this stage," police said in a statement.

    "I'm totally shattered," said Gideon Sam, president of the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee. He called Stander "talented, ultra-competitive but at the same time extremely humble and a true gentleman."

    Full international coverage from NBC News

    The two-time Olympian's death prompted a flood of tributes on social media from South African athletes, politicians and celebrities. Oscar Pistorius, the double-amputee Olympic runner and multiple Paralympic medalist, said on Twitter he was "utterly devastated."

    Absolutely devastated by the tragic news of Burry Stander's Passing. A South African Icon and sporting great. RIP my friend.

    — Oscar Pistorius (@OscarPistorius) January 3, 2013

    "A South African icon and sporting great. RIP my friend," Pistorius wrote.

    Cycling South Africa said Stander was the country's most successful mountain biker and "a true icon and sporting role model."

    Stander was the second leading cyclist to be killed in a road accident in South Africa in recent years. Carla Swart died in January 2011 when she was hit by a truck while training.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Strong young woman': Taliban shooting victim Malala leaves hospital
    • ANALYSIS: Is peace really in the air in Afghanistan?
    • Commemoration or deification? Pakistan embraces 'political goddess' Bhutto
    • Drug-resistant malaria threatens deadly global 'nightmare'
    • From alcohol to kites: An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'
    • UK police: Attackers dressed as Oompa Loompas beat man
    • Vatican launches swipe-card security system

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    38 comments

    What an awful thing. I am so sorry. RIP!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, south-africa, featured, burry-stander
  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    9:03am, EST

    Poll: London Olympics cheered up gloomy Brits

    Thousands of people line the streets to applaud British athletes who brought home 185 medals at this year's Games. ITV's Geraint Vincent reports.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    More than three-quarters of British people thought the London Olympics did "a valuable job in cheering up a country in hard times," according to a new survey.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The Guardian/ICM poll, published Wednesday, found that 78 percent of people agreed the 2012 Games were a good idea, but 20 percent thought the event was “a costly and dangerous distraction.”

    The survey found similar levels of support across different age groups, social class and every region — apart from Scotland.


    But even there 69 percent of people were in favor of the Games, with 31 percent against.

    Brits revel in gloom ahead of London Olympics, but don't believe the gripe

    The Guardian newspaper said that a poll last year had reported that 60 percent of people in the U.K. expected Britain to become a more miserable place overall in 2012.

    But the new survey found that 49 percent of people thought the U.K. had become a better place to live during the year, with 41 percent believing it had got worse.

    The Guardian said the figures suggested "a positive public take on the Olympics is coloring wider perceptions of the year."

    London 2012: Who were the real winners, losers?

    Slideshow: Cartoon Olympics Review

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen, Politicalcartoon

    Click here to view this cartoon slideshow.

    Launch slideshow

    However the poll also found that 61 percent thought British power in the world had been reduced, with 27 percent saying it had increased. And 51% expected the U.K. would still be struggling with economic problems in 2013.

    The paper said ICM Research had interviewed a random sample of 1,002 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 19-23 December 2012.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat
    • Syria activists: Several die after Assad's forces use 'poisonous gases'
    • US civilian killed by Afghan policewoman in 'insider' attack
    • North Korea missiles could reach US, says South
    • At Egypt polling stations, strong sentiments for and against
    • Germany's latest big export: Christmas markets
    • 6-year-old girl shot in face by Taliban and left for dead gets free surgery in US
    • Video: How Will and Kate are spending the holidays

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    9 comments

    I love the British and I really love their humor but they are the largest group of cynical, complainers on the planet.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, europe, world, london, uk, featured
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    8:11am, EDT

    100-meter showdown: Team USA vs. Pistorius

    Team USA sprinters Jerome Singleton and Blake Leeper will take on South African Oscar Pistorius in the 100-meter final at the Paralympics on Thursday. "I feel like I was meant for this moment," Leeper told NBC News. "Oscar, you'd better be ready because me and my teammates are coming for you."

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    Although all Olympic and Paralympic sports are exciting to watch, there’s nothing quite like the men’s 100-meter sprint -- blink and you might miss it.

    And Thursday's 100-meter final promises to be an especially dramatic showdown, all played out in front of a sold-out 80,000-seat crowd.

    Oscar Pistorius is the defending Olympic champion, having won in Beijing in 2008.  His recent outburst after losing the 200-meter race by 0.07 to Brazil’s Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira has been the talk of the Games this week.  Tonight, they’ll face -- and race -- each other again.

    But the Brazilian isn’t the only rival that Pistorius has to worry about.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Among the South African’s stiffest competition will be Team USA’s Jerome Singleton and Blake Leeper. Singleton is the current world champion in the 100 meters, beating Pistorius to that title last year. Leeper recently tied Pistorius’ world record 100-meter time of 10.91 seconds.

    Singleton characterized his rivalry with Pistorius as epic.

    London 2012: Hosting the Games

    “Mohammed Ali had Joe Frasier. Larry Bird had Magic Johnson,” he told NBC News. “We’re going to see a phenomenal race. It’s going to be the Paralympic champion, Oscar Pistorius, versus the current world champion, Jerome Singleton,” he said flashing a showman’s smile.

    “He’s been one of the only athletes to beat me in six years in the hundred.  He’s definitely a guy who stands up when it matters,” Pistorius said of Singleton.

    Brotherhood of rivals
    Despite their serious rivalry, these athletes respect and admire each other.

    Singleton, 26, told NBC that Pistorius was both “a best friend and a brother” to him.

    Julian Stratenschulte / EPA

    Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira (L) of Brazil and Oscar Pistorius (R) of South Africa compete in the Men's 200-meter on Sunday. Oliveira won the gold medal and Pistorius the silver.

    Leeper said he was inspired to run after watching Singleton and Pistorius race each other in the 100-meter final of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

    London 2012 legacy under the spotlight as end nears

    “At that point, I’d never run track in my life. To be here now -- four years later in the same race -- is mind-blowing,” he said.  

    Michael Steele / Getty Images

    Blake Leeper competes in a men's 200-meter race on Saturday, the third day of the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

    For 23-year-old Leeper, it has been a long road to the Olympics. Born with a congenital birth defect, the Tennessee native was fitted with his first pair of prosthetics at just nine months of age.

    “Growing up, I can remember there were times I would come home and ask my mom and dad, ‘Why me? Why does this have to be me?’ The older I got, I realized it’s not 'why me,' it’s … 'why not me?' I feel like I’m meant for this moment. I’m meant for this to happen to me. Oscar, you’d better be ready because me and my teammates, we’re coming for you!” he said.

    Sideline scientists 
    Singleton and Leeper’s lives off the track are inspiring.

    Singleton, now a full-time athlete, was a student when he competed in the Beijing Paralympics.

    Transforming the despair of being paralyzed in battle into determination, Iraq War veteran Scott Winkler sets his sights on a medal at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

     

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    Jerome Singleton competes in a men's 200-meter round race at the 2012 Paralympics in London on Saturday.

    Although he was proud to win a silver medal in Beijing, he felt it could have been a gold had he been focused on running full-time. So he put his career as a scientist on hold. 

    Singleton wasn’t stepping back from just any career. The physics-mathematics double major studied industrial engineering and plans to pursue a doctorate in biomechanics.

    Blind runner's despair turns to joy at Paralympics

    “I’ve actually interned at NASA's Glenn Research Center ... working on a machinery program that was used for the Mars landing,” he said. “I went on to research at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, where I got to learn about different dimensions in smaller space.” 

    For his part, Leeper remembers the moment he decided to fully commit himself to running. He was studying applied physics at the University of Tennessee with plans to develop racing prosthetics.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Nineteen at the time, Leeper sat his parents down and broke the news that he’d decided to move to Chula Vista, Calif., to train full-time at a specialized facility.

    His mother burst into tears.

    “Seeing that, it really hurt me, but at the end of the conversation, I still felt the same way,” he said.  “I had to do this. When I realized that even though I could see my mom cry and I still want to do it, I realized this is something I really want in life.”

    The men they’re ‘supposed to be’
    Leaper and Singleton are aware of their place in history, and the example they are setting for others.  

    “Life can be viewed in two ways: As a warning or an example,” Singleton said. “Each day we watch the news and we see warnings of what we shouldn’t do. So we need to provide examples for our communities of what we should do, and be the man we were supposed to be, not one day meet the man we could have been.”

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London. Madsen told her story to NBC's Jamieson Lesko.

    For Leeper, the whole point of being at the Olympics is to inspire.

    “Whether it’s one kid, two kids, three kids that see me, and if I inspire them ... show them that, yeah, I’m different, I have a disability, but as long as you keep a strong mindset and stay focused you can accomplish anything," he said.

    “When I was little the doctors told my parents I would never walk. Now I’m here running for my country. If that is not a testimony, I do not know what is,” Leeper added with a huge grin.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Video: 100-meter showdown: Team USA guns for Oscar Pistorius
    • Rights group: US waterboarded Gadhafi opponents, sent them to Libya
    • Deadly shooting mars new Quebec premier's victory rally
    • France sends aid, cash to rebel-held Syrian cities, source says
    • Couple held hostage by pirates for 388 days to set sail on new journey
    • Hundreds of Afghan soldiers detained, fired over 'links with insurgents'
    • Mexico arrests 'El Gordo,' alleged leader of Gulf Cartel drug gang
    • Cringe! Britain's finance chief booed at Paralympic Games

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    2 comments

    Good luck Paralympics. I will never watch the events and most of the world won't either. Strap on all the devices necessary to compete and let technology win the day.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, london, featured, paralympics, singleton, 100-meter, pistorius, leeper
  • 5
    Sep
    2012
    11:08am, EDT

    Munich Olympics massacre remembered 40 years later

    Peter Kneffel / AFP - Getty Images

    Vice Prime Minister of Israel Silvan Schalom, right, and President of the National Olympic Commitee Zvi Varshaviak take part in a wreath laying ceremony at the commemoration plate for the victims of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre, Sept. 5. There ceremony took place in front of the house where the Israeli team stayed during the Olympic Games, in Munich, southern Germany.

    Peter Kneffel / EPA

    Masked officers of German Police Special Operation Unit SEK participate in security arrangements during the laying of wreaths to commemorate the Israeli athletes who were murdered in a terrorist attack on the Olympic Games 40 years ago in Munich.

    To mark the 40th anniversary of the Munich Massacre relatives of the 11 Israeli athletes who were killed after being taken hostage by the Palestinian terrorist group Black September, paid tribute at Fuerstenfeldbruck air base, the site of the killings. NBC's Andy Eckardt reports.

    Politicians, survivors, and relatives of victims attended a memorial Wednesday to remember the 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team killed at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. The ceremony occurred in the Olympic Village, where the hostage-taking started 40 years ago in Munich, according to the European Press Agency.

    NBC News reports: 

     They were killed in September 1972 by members of the Black September group who broke into the Olympic Village and took several members of the Israeli team hostage. Two Israelis died as they tried to fight the attackers; nine others and a German police officer died during a failed rescue attempt. Continue reading.

    London Olympic organizers were criticized after they said they would not hold a moment of silence in memory of the athletes killed at the Munich games, NBC News reports.

    Michael Dalder / Reuters

    Wrestler Gad Tsabary stands in silence after laying a wreath at the memorial to the eleven members of the Israeli Olympic team and one German police officer who were killed in an attack by the radical Palestinian group Black September, during the 1972 Munich Olympic Games.

    Joerg Koch / AP

    A woman lights candles in front of wreaths at a memorial at the former accommodation building of the Israeli Olympic team in Munich.

    Tobias Hase / AFP - Getty Images

    The house in Connollystrasse 31, where the Israeli team stayed during the Olympic Games 1972, in Munich is seen on Aug. 29.

    Slideshow: Athletes killed at 1972 Munich Olympics

    Keystone / Getty Images

    Eleven Israeli athletes and coaches were killed by Palestinian gunmen during the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    27 comments

    One might think that this was the opening act of a tragic drama, but you only need to read a little to realize that this conflict has been going on for 1400 years. Muhammad himself was the leader of the army that crushed the Jewish tribes near Medina, and sent them packing in exile from the Arabian  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, olympics, israel, munich, world-news
  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    12:37pm, EDT

    Pistorius sorry for timing of outburst at Paralympics -- but is brand 'destroyed'?

    Tal Cohen / EPA

    Oscar Pistorius of South Africa, left, and Alan Fonteles Cardoso Oliveira of Brazil shake hands on the podium after the Men's 200-meter final during the London 2012 Paralympic Games on Sunday. Pistorius apologized Monday for the timing of his complaints about a rival's blades following his defeat in the final, but insisted that officials need to change the rules to prevent some runners from getting an unfair advantage.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    Updated at 6:15 a.m. ET Tuesday: LONDON - “Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius -- the unofficial face of the Paralympic Games -- was clearly still reeling Monday after losing a key race over the weekend.

    Pistorius issued an apology for “the timing” of his remarks, which in essence accused race winner Alan Fonteles Oliveira from Brazil of not playing fair. But the usually mild-mannered South African did not step back from his statement alleging that Sunday’s race was not run on an even playing field.

    On Tuesday, some in the British media speculated whether he had already tarnishing his image. "If Oscar had run the time he can run I don't think we'd be having the debate about the length of the blades or how tall an athlete should be on blades," Gareth A Davies of the Daily Telegraph said on the U.K.'s Channel 4 News.

    "I think his outburst kind of ruined in a sense, or destroyed the Pistorius brand," Davies said.

    "He's running faster backwards now than he runs forward, (isn't he) with his retractions," anchor Jonathan Edwards joked.

    The 200-meter final was the Paralympic race Pistorius had said he was looking forward to the most, and his shock at losing was palpable. Simply put, he was the one to beat. In Saturday’s qualifying heat, Pistorius had set a new world record. He’d won the gold in the 200 meter in Beijing.

    Doctor Gerry Versfeld, Oscar Pistorius' doctor, describes the decision to amputate the sprinter's legs when he was a boy.  NBC Sports' Mary Carillo reports for Rock Center.

    But then came Sunday night’s race, and his stunning loss.

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    “We are not running a fair race here. I can’t compete with Alan’s stride length,” said Pistorius, who made Olympic history this year as the first disabled athlete to run in the able-bodied games. Pistorius himself fought claims that carbon-fiber prosthetics are advantageous when compared to human legs.

    ‘Absolutely ridiculous’
    In front of a sold-out stadium Sunday night, the 24-year-old South African had a clear lead coming around the final bend. Then Brazil’s Oliveira surged in the final stretch, passed Pistorius, and won the race by .07 seconds.

    "I don't know how you can come back, watching the replay, from eight meters behind on the 100 to win. It's absolutely ridiculous," Pistorius told British broadcaster Channel 4 in a trackside interview.  

    South African runner Oscar Pistorius, who lost both his legs as a child, talks with TODAY's Savannah Guthrie about becoming the first double amputee to compete in the Olympics, and says it was "difficult" to hear people say his prosthetics give him an unfair advantage.

    His comments jarred with the fact that he has said that this year’s Paralympic Games have led spectators to “focus really on the ability” of the athletes, rather than “focusing on the disability.”

    Usually known for his modesty and good sportsmanship, Pistorius accused Oliveira of having an advantage by adjusting the length of his blades, thus giving the Brazilian a longer stride.

    "The [International Paralympic Committee] have their regulations. The regulations allow that athletes can make themselves unbelievably high. We've tried to address the issue with them in the weeks up to this and it's just been falling on deaf ears,” he said on Channel 4.

    Uncharacteristic outburst 
    Pistorius’ remarks reverberated through the sporting world. 

    Iraq vet: 'Now it's time to win' at Paralympics

    “I’m quite shocked the way Oscar had a bit of an outburst because it’s not in his character, so obviously he feels very strongly that the rules need to be addressed,” Olympic silver medalist sprinter Iwan Thomas said on Channel 4. “But as we sit here tonight the rules are as they are and [Oliveira’s] done nothing wrong.”

    Eddie Keogh / Reuters

    The blades of Brazil's Alan Oliveira (R) and South Africa's Oscar Pistorius are seen after the Men's 200m T44 classification at the Olympic Stadium during the London 2012 Paralympic Games on Sunday.

    Thomas did not hold out much hope that Olympic authorities would change their decision.

    “I don’t think they’re just going to suddenly tear up the rule book just because Oscar said something. Although he’s the king of the sport, rules are there and it probably takes a long process to get things looked at,” he said.

    Measured response
    Indeed, the International Paralympic Committee defended its rules by tweeting a photo showing the maximum heights allowed for individual athletes, and showing Pistorius at a height of 193.5cm and Oliveira at 185.4cm. 

    “There are rules in place with IPC Athletics whereby we measure the length of the blade prior to competition, check they're in proportion with the body and all of the athletes last night passed the test, so yes, he (Oliveira) was a legitimate winner,” IPC representative Craig  Spence said.

    Click here of The Science of Sport's findings on the race.

    Sorry for ‘timing’
    On Monday, Pistorius stuck by the essence of his post-race comments and did not step back from his complaint.

    He said in a statement:

    “I would never want to detract from another athlete's moment of triumph and I want to apologize for the timing of my comments after yesterday's race. I do believe that there is an issue here and I welcome the opportunity to discuss with the IPC [International Paralympic Committee] but I accept that raising these concerns immediately as I stepped off the track was wrong. That was Alan's moment and I would like to put on record the respect I have for him. I am a proud Paralympian and believe in the fairness of sport. I am happy to work with the IPC who obviously share these aims.”

    Meanwhile, Team South Africa and SASCOC (South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee) issued a statement welcoming Pistorius' apology.

    Oscar Pistorius from South Africa became the first double amputee to compete in the games by running  the men's 400-meter race. He says that having the opportunity to represent his country in the Olympics "far surpassed" his expectations.

    "We note and welcome Oscar's apology for anything said in haste, and we obviously fully understand that he was emotionally upset immediately after such an important event here in London. We again congratulate Oscar on winning his silver medal on Sunday. As always we are fully supportive of all our athletes and will engage through the official channels from the National Paralympic Committee in South Africa to the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) on any concerns that Oscar may have."

    They’ll meet again
    Oliveira, who called Pistorius a “great athlete,” said he was saddened by the South African’s reactions.

    “I am just sad with the interview where he said my blades were too big” Oliveria said. “He was bothered by my time in the semi-finals and he wanted to get to me with his polemic but it did not work. For me he is a really great idol and to hear that from a great idol is difficult.”

    Pistorius and Oliveira are on course to meet again in round one of the 100 meters on Wednesday and round one of the 400 meters on Friday. Assuming they both make those finals, they will race again at the 100 meter final on Thursday and the 400 meter final on Saturday.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Sun Myung Moon, founder of Unification Church, dies at 92
    • Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric
    • 'Big enough for all of us': Clinton says US can work with China in Pacific
    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter
    • Ex-Marine on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    52 comments

    Hey, wasn't he the guy that said the blade size and type didn't matter when he wanted to run the regular Olympics? This is just poor sportsmanship.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, oliveira, featured, blade-runner, paralympics, pistorius, jamieson-lesko
  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    3:56am, EDT

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    Channel 4 Paralympics - Meet the Superhumans from IWRF on Vimeo.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- A battlefield explosion sends troops flying, a speeding car flips over on a highway, a "Murderball" player is knocked right out of his wheelchair, all set to a fierce Public Enemy soundtrack. 

    "Forget everything you thought you knew about strength. Forget everything you thought you knew about humans. It's time to do battle. Meet the Superhumans."

    That’s how British TV viewers are being introduced to this year’s Paralympic athletes by Channel 4, which is broadcasting the London 2012 Games. Its campaign is giving Superbowl ads a run for their money, going viral with more than 500,000 views on YouTube alone.


    The hard-hitting ad is designed to jolt the public into a state of awareness and awe of what many of these disabled athletes have had to deal with just to stay alive, let alone compete at an elite level. It highlights that the competitors have overcome disabilities and disasters most of us cannot begin to imagine or will ever have to face. And that was before they became world-class competitors.

    Transforming the despair of being paralyzed in battle into determination, Iraq War veteran Scott Winkler sets his sights on a medal at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from Britain's ITV News

    The campaign also aims to combat the impression that the Paralympics is essentially the "Olympics-lite." Among the sports the ad focuses on is wheelchair rugby -- which is so violent that it's been dubbed "Murderball." The sheer amount of full-force contact between players requires welders to be put on standby on the sideline to repair damaged wheelchairs.

    Some of the hottest tickets at the London Paralympics are for wheelchair rugby. The sport is so violent and fierce, that it has been dubbed "Murderball". ITN's Lewis Vaughan Jones met Team Great Britain's inspirational captain.

    The International Wheelchair Rugby Federation has championed the "Meet the Superhumans" campaign and comments posted on its Vimeo page illustrate the ad's power. "Now that's what I'm talking about, 'Thank you for letting me be myself.' Public Enemy never sounded better," one fan wrote. "It's a great soundtrack for our ... lives whether we're Olympians or not."

    Channel 4

    This ad campaign for Channel 4's Paralympic coverage has captured the imagination of many people in Britain.

    The event was founded 1948 to help rehabilitate injured British veterans returning from the Second World War, though many Americans remain unaware that it exists. (There's also a tendency to confuse it with the Special Olympics, which is unrelated. Paralympic athletes compete despite impairments including amputations, blindness, cerebral palsy and mobility disabilities.) However, there are signs that 2012 will be its breakout year.

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London. Madsen told her story to NBC's Jamieson Lesko.

    London-bound veterans push Paralympics back to battlefield roots

    The success of the London 2012 Olympic Games has sparked a spike in public interest in Britain. Ticket sales have wildly exceeded expectations, with organizers saying 2.3 million tickets have already been sold, which is more than any other Paralympic Games in history. There's a high demand for the 200,000 remaining tickets, which will be made available in batches online.

    Soccer superstar David Beckham is serving as an ambassador to the Games and Prince William and Kate Middleton are expected to attend Wednesday night's Opening Ceremony.

    Ahead of the London Paralympics, L.A. Galaxy midfielder David Beckham spent a day learning blind football from Team Great Britain.

    Team USA features 20 military veterans and active duty service members, including some wounded at war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Among them is U.S. Army 82nd Airborne paratrooper Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed when her parachute got tangled with another in 2003. Doctors said she'd never walk again but Maczyk refused to listen. And she has proved them wrong.

    "I wasn't hearing it. In my heart, in my soul, I knew I could walk," Mazyck told NBC News. "To this day, I am walking."

    Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed during a parachute jump with the 82 Airborne in November 2003, will compete in the javelin at the London Paralympics. "This is my second chance," she tells NBC News' Jamieson Lesko.

    The South Carolina-based mother of one is now engaged to be married but admits shes also deeply "in love" with her javelin.

    'Very fortunate'
    U.S. Navy Lt. Bradley Snyder was blinded by a bomb while rushing to the aid of two fellow soldiers in Afghanistan.

    His training regimen had him swimming 4,000 yards a day at his local pool in Baltimore. He is due to compete on the one-year anniversary of his injury. 

    Slideshow: Blinded warrior has visions of gold

    Lt. Brad Snyder lost his sight in an IED explosion in Afghanistan last year. The Navy officer will once again represent the U.S., this time at the London 2012 Paralympics in September.

    Launch slideshow

    "I knew I was very fortunate to be in that hospital bed and not in a coffin in the ground," Snyder said. "I'm going to show people that I'm not going to let this beat me. I'm not going to let blindness build a brick wall around me. I am going to find a way forward."

    From darkness to gold: Blinded Navy swimmer set to race at Paralympics

    South African double amputee and sprinter Oscar Pistorius, who has been nicknamed the "Blade Runner," will compete in the Paralympics after making history by running in the 400-meter event at the Olympics.

    Pistorius is likely to face tough competition from Team USA, including a 25-year-old rocket scientist Jerome Singleton and the 22-year-old Blake Leeper.

    Pistorius, a double amputee born without fibulas in his legs, has trained hard to participate in the Olympics despite having to wear prosthetic legs. NBC's Mary Carillo reports.

    Pistorius, a four-time Paralympic gold medealist, will carry the flag for South Africa at Wednesday's Opening Ceremony. Coldplay will perform at the Closing Ceremony on September 9.

    "I believe these Games are going to change peoples' mindsets about disabilities," Pistorius told Reuters. "In the last two to three years I've seen a shift. For many years people have shunned disability, but I don't have anything in life I'm not able to do. I don't think of my disability, I think of my ability."

    Sixteen countries are competing for the first time. Among them, Haiti will make its debut with two athletes competing in track and field.

    This is the story of two paralympians from Haiti - a nation which is competing in the games for the first time. It's a country where disability is stigmatized and those who are disabled are shunned. ITV's Lewis Vaughan Jones reports on two pioneers who want to overcome prejudice and fill their nation with pride.

    British broadcaster Channel 4 will show 150 hours of programming and about 350 hours more online and across three temporary on-demand channel.

    The International Paralympic Committee predicts that, adding together viewers on each of the 11 days of competition, the total audience figure for the London Paralympics will reach 4 billion.

    It said that four years ago in Beijing, a total overall audience of around 3.8 billion in 80 countries watched the 2008 Paralympics - including a total of 1.4 billion viewings in China across 11 days, 670 million in Japan and 439 million in Germany. Calculating figures in that way means individual viewers are counted several times.

    More coverage of the London Paralympics from NBC News

    The daughter of the founder of the Paralympics told NBC News that the record-breaking ticket sales and interest in the London event would have made her father "immensely proud."

    Of all the events that will be showcased in the Paralympics, few are as intriguing as blind soccer. ITN's Lewis Vaughan Jones met Team Great Britain captain David Clarke who explained how it works.

    Eva Loeffler said Ludwig "Poppa" Guttmann – a neurologist who pioneered the rehabilitation of paralyzed Second World War service members at a hospital near London – would have been "extremely pleased" at how the Games had captured the public imagination.

    The 79-year-old said it was "very appropriate, in a way" that so many veterans from the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts were taking part in this year's event. "Helping the military wounded was where it all began, after all," she said.

    London 2012: Who were the real winners, losers?

    Guttman, who fled Germany in 1933 after being persecuted by Hitler's Nazi regime, challenged medical orthodoxy at Stoke Mandeville hospital, north–west of London, by encouraging patients to play sports rather than accept their paralysis.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    The Agitos symbol of the Parlaympics has replaced the Olympic rings on London's iconic Tower Bridge.

    When London hosted the Summer Olympics in 1948, he created the Stoke Mandeville Games involving just 16 competitors. In the years that followed, he built his competition into the parallel Paralympic Games.

    This year's event will feature 4,200 athletes from 166 teams competing in 20 sports.

    Although Guttman died in 1980, Loeffler has continued his work, becoming a key figure in disabled sport – and has accepted an honorary role as mayor of the Paralympic Athletes' Village at the Olympic Park in East London.

    'Second-class citizens': Wheelchair user's fury at Paralympics over seating

    Lt. Brad Snyder, blinded by an IED explosion in Afghanistan, is now training for the London 2012 Paralympics.

    One of Guttman's dreams was that disabled athletes would ultimately compete alongside their able-bodied counterparts – a wish that came true last month with Pistorius' historic participation at the Olympics.

    "He would have regarded that as a great moment, I'm sure," Loeffler said.

    How to watch the Paralympics from the U.S.

    • The International Paralympic Committee will live stream more than 780 hours of events.
    • NBC Sports Network will air one-hour highlight shows on September 4, 5, 6, and 11. All NBC and NBC Sports Network Paralympic highlight shows and specials will re-air on Universal Sports Network and www.UniversalSports.com.
      Check your local listings for channel info.
    • NBC will broadcast a 90-minute special from 2-3:30 p.m. ET on September 16.
    • The United States Olympic Committee has created a YouTube channel dedicated to the Games.
    • The U.S. Paralympic Team will also provide in-depth coverage of Team USA on its website.

    Fahim Rahimi, is Afghanistan's only competitor at the Paralympics. He lost his leg in a land mine accident when he was just 12, but tonight the powerlifter is carrying the Afghan flag into the Olympic stadium. Jonathan Rugman, Britain's Channel 4 news reports.

    More London 2012 coverage from NBC News:

    • Olympic medalists beginning to rake in gold
    • From javelins to light fixtures: Olympic sell-off begins
    • Restaurateur claims Games cost her business $140k
    • Brazilians party in London as focus shifts to Rio 2016
    • Will Olympics drive UK's couch potatoes to extinction?
    • Olympic jokers: Queen has 'a laugh,' empires compete
    • Who'll win gold for partying? Olympians let hair down

     

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    NBC News' Alastair Jamieson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    90 comments

    Such an inspiring storry.

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  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    10:29am, EDT

    Reports: Somali Olympic sprinter died when migrant boat sank

    Kerim Okten/ EPA file

    Somalian athlete Samia Yusuf Omar at at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A woman from war-torn Somalia who rose to fame by running in the 200 meters at the Beijing Olympics drowned while trying to reach Europe ahead of the London 2012 Games, it has emerged.

    Samia Yusuf Omar died when a boat carrying migrants from Libya to Italy sank in April, according to a report in Italian by the Pubblico blog and other Italian media.


    The BBC said the Italian media reports suggest Omar may have been hoping to find a coach in Europe who could help her reach the London Olympics.

    Somali track and field legend Abdi Bile, who was world champion in the 1500 meters in 1987, was quoted as comparing Omar’s fate with that of Somali-born British runner Mo Farah, who won two Olympic gold medals at the London Games.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "We are happy for Mo -- he is our pride," he said, according to Pubblico. "But we will not forget Samia."

    There were few details about what happened to Omar, but BBC News said Somalia’s National Olympic Committee had confirmed she had died. NBC News was unable to reach the committee on the phone number listed on its website and an email was not immediately returned.

    Italy's Coast Guard rescues 80 migrants from an overcrowded boat stranded just off the coast of the southern island of Lampedusa. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    There were tributes to Omar from across the world on the comments section of a YouTube video of her race in Beijing.

    “Love, hope and peace from Barcelona Samia. Your still alive in ours hearts. RIP,” one user, frankiee78, said.

    Somali Olympic chief killed in Mogadishu suicide blast

    “Brave is the one who never give up ... Even being the last one on this heat, Samia was proud of being there for her country. Every time when a shooting star will shows in a Somalian sky, it will be Samia the one who is going to be running for her country.... RIP from Columbus, OH,” MrEmilito74 said.

    There were messages from people in the United States, Serbia, Mexico, Portugal, Uruguay and other countries.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Wife of disgraced Chinese leader gets death sentence with reprieve
    • Russian top clerics forgive Pussy Riot, ask for mercy
    • With wife's conviction, what is next for China's Bo Xilai?
    • Assange in balcony appeal: Release Bradley Manning
    • Czech police accuse man of plotting Norway-like copycat terrorist attack
    • Government minister among 32 killed as Sudanese helicopter crashes into mountain
    • Video: Chaos follows Syrian airstrikes
    • Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    63 comments

    What a tragic end to a young life. It reminds me that no matter how bad we think our government is, none of us are literally dying to get away.

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  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    11:53am, EDT

    Restaurateur claims London Games cost her business, seeks $140,000 from mayor

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Pedestrians walk past an Austin Reed store on Regent Street in Central London on August 2. Stores in this upscale shopping district increased staff and expanded hours in anticipation of additional business brought on by visitors to the Olympic Games.

    By Daniel Strieff, NBC News

    LONDON -- London’s mayor has boasted that the city hosted the "best record-breaking Olympics Games ever," but his words seem unlikely to assuage an angry restaurateur who seeks $140,000 to make up for revenue lost during the two-week sporting festival.

    In an op-ed in the City A.M. newspaper, Neleen Straus said that Mayor Boris Johnson's warning to residents of the British capital that the Olympics would cause the city to be overrun with tourists during the two-week-long Games had caused her to lose "80 percent" of her trade.


    Straus owns the High Timber restaurant near the Millennium Bridge on the north side of the River Thames, in the financial district of London, known as the City.

    She said she had "hand-delivered" a bill to Johnson for $140,000.

    Will Games curse leave 'ghost town' London out of the gold rush?

    "I squarely blame Johnson for my lack of customers because, time and again, he warned Londoners to leave room for the millions of visitors he said would come to the capital. This inspired City bosses to suggest that their employees either take their holidays during the Olympics, or work from home," Straus wrote.

    More British coverage by NBC News' UK partner ITV News


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    As a result, she said, her normal customer base of bankers, accountants and lawyers did not come into her restaurant because they did not travel to work in London.

    "It's been a travesty of miscalculation and scaremongering," she wrote

    London 2012: Who were the real winners, losers?

    A public relations representative for High Timber told NBC News that as of Tuesday morning, Straus had not received any official response from London’s city hall.

    Slideshow: Olympic Emotional Moments

    /

    Click for more from the 2012 summer games in London.

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    A spokesperson for the mayor’s office could not immediately comment on whether Johnson had actually received Strauss' bill.

    Mayor gloats over 'best' Games ever
    On Monday, Johnson gloated to reporters, saying London had defied the skeptics. Some 300,000 foreigners and 5.5 million day-trippers flocked to the city for the games. Hotel occupancy was at 84 percent -- double what Beijing and Sydney saw during their Olympics.

    Completer coverage in London 2012: Hosting the Games

    Johnson said the city's public transport had coped just fine. Use of London's subway -- the Tube -- was up 30 percent but saw few major problems, according to a statement by the mayor's office. London's overground commuter train saw double the normal crowds, and the city's bike hire scheme broke a record with 46,000 bikes rented on a single day.

    The mayor’s office also said that the retail sector in the touristy West End could expect to see 250 million pounds "pour in on the back of the Games over the next 100 days."

    London mayor Boris Johnson attempts to make a dramatic entrance at an Olympic party—but gets stranded on a zip wire instead. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    It also quoted card issuer Visa as reporting that transactions are up almost 20 percent in London’s restaurants, nearly 25 percent in its nightclubs, and some 114 percent in theater and other ticket sales.

    After Olympics boost, it's austerity for Britons

    "London has just put on the best record breaking Olympics Games ever. ... The doom mongers are on the back foot and we are going to prove them wrong further as we deliver an equally successful Paralympic Games and build on the legacy we are already seeing emerge from our efforts," Johnson said in a statement on Monday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Study: Japan nuclear disaster caused mutated butterflies
    • On to Sochi: Virtual tour of the next Olympic city
    • Will world inaction help al-Qaida gain foothold in Syria?
    • Analysis: Egypt's Morsi shows he's a force to be reckoned with
    • Vatican says the 'butler did it,' orders trial
    • Olympic heroes turn tourists as London 2012 end nears
    • Mormon church brings in $7 billion a year from tithing

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

    296 comments

    Looking at their menu, $36.00 for a ribeye, $6.00, for hand cut chips, and $10,00 for Ice Cream - do ya think maybe this kept the customers away?

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  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    6:41am, EDT

    Military official: UK forces will take 2-year hit from Olympics

    Andrew Medichini / AP, file

    Members of the British military rest on July 27 after working at London's ExCel Centre, days before the start of the 2012 Summer Olympics.

    By NBC News and wire reports

    LONDON -- Britain's armed forces will take two years to recover from its deployment at the London 2012 Olympics, the country's chief military planner for the Games told a British newspaper.

    Wing Commander Peter Daulby also told The Guardian that the need to send 18,000 troops to Olympic venues after security shortfalls by private contractor G4S proved that Britain "needs a military for more than war fighting."


    He said that the deployment took troops away from normal duties and highlighted the danger of "pulling the military down."

    The Olympics became the largest peacetime operation ever performed by Britain's armed forces after G4S could not supply all of the promised 10,400 guards for the two-week sporting festival.

    'It will take two years to recover from this'
    "We were originally planning to provide niche capabilities. When the requirement for venue security was doubled, that was a bit of a game changer," Daulby was quoted as saying in the Guardian on Tuesday.

    "It will take two years to recover from this, to get back to normal, to get everything back into kilter. You can't expect them to go back to normal routine very easily," the newspaper quoted him as saying.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    London 2012: Who were the real winners, losers?

    Daulby said Britain's commitment to Afghanistan had not been affected by the Olympics but the military had exceeded by 6,000 the maximum number of people he thought the Ministry of Defense could supply.

    With music and cheekiness, 'happy and glorious' Games close

    "Anything above 18,000 and you start to shut down elements of defense," he was quoted as saying.

    Just two weeks away from the Olympic Opening Ceremony, the British government has announced thousands of additional soldiers will be sent to provide security at game venues.

    A spokesman for the Ministry of Defense said the contribution to the Olympics had been planned to avoid an impact on current operations.

    More coverage of the Olympics in London 2012: Hosting the Games

    "While some individual training and leave may need to be rescheduled, this will be managed and will not impact on operations including the ongoing mission in Afghanistan," he told Reuters.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Pool via Reuters

    British Prime Minister David Cameron hands out brownies as he meets with soldiers from 5th Battalion, The Rifles, on security duty on Oct. 2 near his official Downing Street residence during the London 2012 Summer Olympics.

    Analyst: An 'overstatement'
    Valentina Soria, a research fellow in counter-terrorism and security at the Royal United Services Institute in London, told NBC News that Daulby's comments may have been an "overstatement."

    More on this story on NBC News' UK partner ITV News

    "The kind of day-to-day security required for the Olympics would have had an impact on the military personnel and the training of the armed forces, but I don't think it would take so much time for them to recover from the effort at the Games," she said.

    "In any case, it was well-planned ahead of time and so it would not have been a complete surprise for the military," she said.

    Olympic security plan transforms London into fortress

    Soria added that Daulby's comments could also be understood in the context of the funding pressures faced by the British military and to demonstrate that the armed forces were needed for both defense and domestic security purposes.

    Regular trained members of Britain's army will be cut to 82,000 from 102,000 by 2020 to save money.

    Slideshow: Olympic Emotional Moments

    /

    Click for more from the 2012 summer games in London.

    Launch slideshow

    Defense chief: Military has been 'humanized'
    British Defense Minister Philip Hammond said Tuesday that G4S's failure to provide enough guards showed that there were some things only state organizations, such the army, could be relied upon to do.

    Complete international news coverage on NBCNews.com

    Hammond, currently overseeing the largest overhaul of Britain's armed forces in a generation, said in an interview with The Independent newspaper that "the story of G4S and the military rescue is quite informative."

    As the Olympics come to an end in London, there are the 2014 Sochi Games in Russia to look forward to. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    Hammond also said that deploying troops in civilian venues would have a positive impact on the military's reputation within Britain.

    "It has humanized the face of the armed forces. In Afghanistan the image is of people in helmets, and kit (equipment), and tooled up. But underneath all that are people you can enjoy a drink with in the pub or a bit of banter at the checkpoint," he told the newspaper.

    NBC News' Daniel Strieff and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Will world inaction help al-Qaida gain foothold in Syria?
    • Analysis: Egypt's Morsi shows he's a force to be reckoned with
    • Vatican says the 'butler did it,' orders trial
    • Olympic heroes turn tourists as London 2012 end nears
    • Mormon church brings in $7 billion a year from tithing

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    59 comments

    So the government should extract the cost from the contractor for failing to do its job.

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  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    6:01am, EDT

    Are Olympics a Trojan horse for Big Brother?

    Ettore Ferrari / EPA file

    A security camera stands on a lamp post in front of London's iconic Clock Tower, which houses Big Ben, on July 23.

    By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

    When the Olympic flame is doused on Sunday, we know the cheers will quiet, the athletes will move on and fans will go home. But will Big Brother stay behind?

    Every Olympics host city goes through it: the Olympic hangover. When the athletes step off the medal podiums, the city must clean up, pay the bills and figure out how to monetize a series of shiny new venues. The most important decision, however, might seem much more subtle: What happens to all those new security cameras and other surveillance technologies that were installed for the Games? Privacy experts fret that, as with Athens, Beijing and Vancouver, the Olympics means a steep ratcheting up of security that never really gets ratcheted down.


    "It would be a tragedy if the most visible legacy of the Games in London was a huge increase in the amount of surveillance people are subjected to in their everyday lives," said Nick Pickles, director of London-based Big Brother Watch.

    Host cities tolerate massive shows of security that would otherwise be unimaginable. In London, which already has more CCTV security cameras than any other city in the world, 2,000 new cameras were installed in the Olympic Village, while nearly 2,000 more were installed around the city, according to Big Brother Watch. License plate recognition systems have been installed throughout London. There are even surface-to-air missiles atop apartment buildings and more military troops on the ground than Britain has in Afghanistan. An $877 million effort, it's been called the largest peacetime deployment of security forces in history, but the question remains: Will there be mission creep? How much of that infrastructure and the public’s newfound tolerance for being watched will remain after the Games are finished?

    Earlier this year, the Electronic Frontier Foundation published an analysis of all recent Games and says the results are disheartening.  It should come as no surprise that the Beijing Summer Games were used as an excuse to install thousands of cameras that are still in operation, said the report’s author, Rebecca Bowe. But other cities have suffered similar fates, too.

    "The Games bring a legacy that lives well beyond the prestige," Bowe said. "We've witnessed time and again, the security infrastructure lives on well beyond the Games."

    Concrete concerns
    The concerns aren't merely theoretical. Athens officials installed about 1,000 cameras for the 2004 Summer Games. In 2007, Greece amended its national data protection law to exempt the cameras; Greek privacy commissioner Dimitris Gourgourakis resigned over the incident. The cameras have since been used during protests following economic unrest there.

    More Olympics coverage in London 2012: Hosting the Games

    The Olympics has a long-running legacy as a massive security event, which long pre-dates post-9/11 terrorism concerns. It dates at least as far back as the Munich Summer Games of 1972, when a security breach contributed to the kidnapping of Israeli athletes from the Olympic Village; 11 were eventually murdered.  But even before that event, the Olympics were never free of international politics and the real possibility that some group might use them to violently make a point.

    No one disputes the need for heightened security during the Games, but is the installation of security infrastructure, and the culture that comes with it, a one-way street? Can a security state be dismantled? Or are the Games a Trojan horse that allows those with a heavy-handed security agenda to gain the upper hand?

    Olympic security plan transforms London into fortress

    "The equipment has been bought and paid for. The real risk is they simply leave it in place and turn it over to local authorities, and by the back door, we have a huge increase in surveillance," Pickles said. "Government officials have made assurances that some of it is temporary, but they haven't said what."

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    Already, whiz-bang security technology in London has proven tempting to local authorities. Pickles pointed to minutes from a recent borough council meeting in Newham, just east of London, where officials openly expressed desire to buy Olympics surveillance technology after the Games end.

    Alfredo Lopez, founder of the international privacy advocacy organization MayFirst/PeopleLink, said it's very difficult to reverse the Olympics security buildup.

    "There is no way these guys are going to take down those cameras, especially with all the social unrest there," said Lopez, who is based in New York.

    Lopez, a professed lover of Olympic sports, said the security issue threatens to squander any of the goodwill gained by the otherwise-peaceful international gathering.

    Red Tape Chronicles on NBCNews.com

    "I happen to believe, and I know this is corny, (that) the Olympics is one of the greatest things the human race does, so why do these bastards pervert it with their repressive attitudes?" he said. "How can you run a principal event of goodwill and friendship, then at same time, on top of buildings you have missiles? It's totally incongruous. It's very, very disturbing and contradictory to the Olympic spirit. It ruins the whole thing."

    Slideshow: Olympic Emotional Moments

    /

    Click for more from the 2012 summer games in London.

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    'It softens people up'
    One fundamental problem of the Games is that they are used as an "obvious show of military capability," Lopez said, with host nations using the occasion the beat their chests about their powerful ability to respond to threats. But Pickles is worried about a much more subtle issue: Residents get used to the trade-off between privacy and heightened security practices, and their tolerance level is slowly raised, leading to fewer objections to police tactics.

    "The danger is it softens people up to the next step," he said.

    The next step is Brazil in 2016, where circumstances on the ground dictate what will almost inevitably be an even stronger implementation of security force and technology. (Privacy advocates are too pessimistic about the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, to use those games as a battleground.) An active battle between paramilitary police forces and organized crime means residents are used to compromised civil liberties, and even before the 2016 Games, Rio de Janeiro will host the World Cup in 2014. Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks suggest that U.S. government officials have encouraged use of additional surveillance tools by the Brazilian government, as well as a partnership with U.S. security agencies.

    As a result, market research firm 6Wresearch predicts the market for security cameras will nearly quadruple, to $362 million, by 2016.

    By then, Pickles warns, people have another element to worry about: increased sophistication of technologies like facial recognition. Londoners, for example, would almost certainly not tolerate a permanent military presence in the city. But as police gadgets get smaller and smarter, they also become less visible.

    Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor

    /

    A diverse community in East London will welcome the world to Britain for the 2012 Olympic Games. Meet residents and hear how they feel about having a huge, world stage in their backyard.

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    "It's getting more discreet, even as the processing power is getting more powerful," he said. "It's becoming much more clandestine, ... which means people won't object to it as much."

    Looking to Vancouver
    Brazil and London might be able to learn something from Vancouver's experience after the 2010 Winter Games. Western Canada has an active civil participation culture, and even before the Games began, Canada's privacy commissioner warned about mission creep in Olympics security plans.

    "The right to privacy must be upheld, even during mega-events like the Olympic Games, where the threat to security is higher than usual," Commissioner Jennifer Stoddard said in a speech delivered before the Games calling for dismantling of surveillance technology after the Games. "Will the residents of Vancouver and the lower mainland wind up living surrounded by an array of surveillance systems that they neither want nor need?"

    Partly as a result, most of the 900 video cameras installed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were removed after the Games. About 75 were left behind for use by the Vancouver police, said Adam Molnar, who is studying the Olympics security effect as part of his Ph.D. work at the University of Victoria.

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    "British Columbia civil liberties associations put pressure on the Vancouver Police Department, which was in negotiations to keep the cameras up," he said. Even some of the remaining cameras were turned off, only to be used in crisis situations, he said.

    On the other hand, analysis of Vancouver's post-Olympics security hangover is muddied by the fact that in the spring of 2011, there were major riots after the Vancouver Canucks lost hockey’s Stanley Cup final. City officials have successfully turned to Twitter and other social media tools that deputized people to help identify criminals during the riots. Given the embarrassment over the riots, many residents were eager to help.

    "That turns out to be an alternate route to (security) cameras everywhere," Molnar said.

    The most lasting legacy of the Vancouver Games, Molnar said, was not police gadgetry, but rather reorganization of the police force into small, nimble anti-riot teams that share some characteristics with paramilitary teams.

    "The extent that militarist ideal supplants community-based policing, that should concern people," he said. "And any time you have a deepening of integration between civilian and military police, like you have now in London, that's disturbing."

    Molnar felt confident that Vancouver's security experience offered some hope to privacy advocates in London and Rio, however.

    East London, which will host the Olympic Games, boasts a colorful history. NBC News' Jim Maceda reports.

    "You can look to Vancouver as a positive example of an active civil liberty and political community that tried to engage the government around privacy and surveillance issues, and that did earn some small victories," he said. "In many ways it's forced policing agencies to respond to public debate. ... There's certainly a need for informed civilian oversight."

    'Mega-events'
    But Bowe, of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said she's worried that the Olympics will continue to be abused as one of a list of "mega-events" that give officials permission to tighten the security screws until tremendous power is concentrated in small government forces.

    "The march toward a militarized, urban future will continue apace unless people push back," she said. 

    Traveling around traffic-plagued London can be a hassle at the best of times -- never mind during an event such as the Olympic Games. NBCNews.com put the city to the test in a race to the Olympic Park.

    And Lopez sees little room for hope at the moment.

    "My general worry as a human being is about the setting up of apparatus of police states in all of these places," he said.

    Even those who have faith in the good intentions of their current government are being short-sighted, he warned.

    "The (U.S.) and some of these places are not a police state now. But the problem is if the apparatus is set up, it could be easily be Nazified and turned on people. ... If there's a history to the world, it's that certain small, elite groups of people usurp and pervert the great works of the majority of humanity, like the Olympic Games, for nefarious and selfish purposes."

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  • 8
    Aug
    2012
    11:11am, EDT

    Londoners: I'll take a 'flat white'... What?

    London's multicultural spirit on display at the Summer Games includes food and drink. NBC's Adrienne Mong reports on London's coffee revolution.

    By Adrienne Mong

    LONDON — The British capital won the 2012 Summer Olympic bid with a pitch for its multicultural spirit.  And in the past two weeks, that claim has been borne out by a batch of gold medalists hailing from diverse backgrounds — take for instance, heptathlete Jessica Ennis (British-Jamaican) or long-distance runner Mo Farah (British-Somali), who won the men's 10,000-meter race.

    But London’s multicultural spirit lives not just in the people but also the food and drink.

    Take coffee, for instance.

    In the past decade, this most devotedly tea-drinking city has seen an independent coffee culture gradually take root and flourish, led by the "flat white," a coffee import from Australia and New Zealand that was readily adopted by London's caffeine brigade.


    The coffee drink that’s a lifestyle

    "It's an espresso with some milk in it," said Gwilym Davies, who opened Prufrock Coffee, an independent coffee house in Holborn almost two years ago.

    It sounds simple, but it's not.

    Adrienne Mong

    The espresso machine at Prufrock Coffee gets a regular workout.

    In fact, explaining what goes into a flat white can lead to a lot of discussion over proportions of coffee to milk — a debate that some of the independent café owners now find tedious.

    “[D]escribe it as a latte with less milk or a cappuccino with less foam or however you will,” said Anette Moldvaer of Square Mile Coffee Roasters.  (Fans say the flat white tastes like a very strong latte, ie, more bean, less milk.)

    "There's a lot of mystique around essentially what you could argue is just a balance of milk, foam, and espresso,” said Ben Townsend, owner of The Espresso Room, a tiny gem of a café also tucked away in Holborn that opened in 2009. Ultimately, he added, the "flat white describes a style rather than a specific drink."

    That style is very much a London hybrid.

    London’s multicultural coffee scene
    Moldvaer, Townsend, and Davies comprise a group of aficionados who have built a London coffee culture that now rivals – some of the independent café owners say even surpasses – those of Italy, where the espresso was invented.

    “[I]f you look at all the major continental brands, the Lavazzas, the Illys, they dominate the market, and…I’ve never seen transparent listings of where the coffee’s from. It’s just named as Illy or whatever,” said Townsend.

    Adrienne Mong

    The Espresso Room is tucked away on a Holborn side street.

    Whereas in London, the independent cafes learned from the Scandinavian countries, adopting “their roasting styles and their ability to get good green beans from the farmers,” said Davies.  Depending on the season, the beans might come from far-flung countries in Latin America (for example, Guatemala) or Africa (at the moment, Ethiopia or Kenya).  "It's a seasonal product, and therefore it will taste different from month to month, season to season," said Townsend.

    Combined with what some describe as “Australian-style” service and speed, London’s cafes have produced their own hybrid culture. “The London scene has been an incredible fusion of quality and speed, and I think you can easily say that London coffee is equal – at its best – to anywhere in the world,” said Townsend.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Even so, “the independent coffee culture here is still young and in constant development, very much creating and educating its customer base as it goes along,” said Moldvaer.  She and her business partner James Hoffmann started Square Mile Coffee Roasters in 2007 “to help London serve and drink better coffee.”

    Along with other outlets such Workshop (formerly known as St. Ali—a Melbourne outpost), the Department of Coffee and Social Affairs, and Allpress Espresso, the independent coffee houses have also had an impact on the chains.

    In 2009, Starbucks and Costa in the U.K. rolled out their own version of the flat white.  The move within weeks made the flat white, as one observer put it, “as edgy as a soy latte.” (For non-coffee drinkers, that's a diss.)

    Adrienne Mong

    London has seen a rapid growth in independent coffee houses during the past few years.

    The trend hasn't quite caught on across the pond.  Although it has popped up in hipster U.S. neighborhoods like New York’s Tribeca and Williamsburg neighborhoods, the filter coffee still reigns strong, according to baristas at the popular Chicago-based independent chain, Intelligentsia Coffee.

    In the meantime, purveyors like Prufrock are happy that customers have moved onto the coffee itself.  “We’re finding a growth…in black coffee,” said Davies.  “And we’re exploring different farms, different varieties, different processing of the coffee bean and exploring the flavor essentially.”

    Coffee has come such a long way in London that inevitably one wonders, what will happen to tea?

    “You can’t replace our tea,” protested Davies. “I love my tea. If there’s a little disaster going on, I sit down and we have tea.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Who'll win the gold medal for partying? Olympians let hair down
    • One year after London riots, a family still grapples with fallout
    • Antarctica rescue drama: US expeditioner ailing
    • Are these German protesters the world's oldest squatters?
    • Will Games curse leave 'ghost town' London out of the gold rush?
    • Interpol drops 'red notice' for dissident
    • Race to London's Olympic Park: Fastest way is ...?
    • Journalist: British militants took me hostage in Syria
    • Londoners: I'll take a 'flat white'... What?

    33 comments

    Its nice to get some light-hearted news at times, I welcome it with everything else that is going on. :)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, london, coffee, uk, adrienne-mong, flat-white
  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    9:27pm, EDT

    Olympics officials accused of anti-Semitism over Munich remembrance

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Ankie Spitzer, the widow of a Munich attack victim, addresses a memorial event Monday at the Guildhall in London.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON -- At a ceremony Monday to remember 11 Israeli athletes and coaches killed at the 1972 Munich Games, top Olympics' official Jacques Rogge came under sustained attack over the refusal to honor the dead with a minute’s silence at the opening ceremony of London 2012.

    As he sat among a crowd of some 850 people in London’s Guildhall, Rogge heard several speakers condemn the International Olympic Committee’s decision to reject calls from the Israeli, U.S. and other governments for a tribute to the victims of a Palestinian terrorist group to be held during a prominent part of the Games.


    The Guildhall ceremony was organized by the Olympic Committee of Israel, the Israeli Embassy to the U.K. and the Jewish community. U.K. politicians including a cabinet secretary, Jeremy Hunt, and London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, lit candles in memory of the dead Olympians.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    They were killed in September 1972 by members of the Black September group who broke into the Olympic Village and took several members of the Israeli team hostage. Two Israelis died as they tried to fight the attackers; nine others and a German police officer died during a failed rescue attempt.

    At the Guildhall ceremony, Ankie Spitzer, widow of fencing referee and coach Andre Spitzer, 27, received a standing ovation after an impassioned speech in which she accused Olympic officials of anti-Semitism.

    Slideshow: Athletes killed at 1972 Munich Olympics

    Keystone / Getty Images

    Eleven Israeli athletes and coaches were killed by Palestinian gunmen during the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany.

    Launch slideshow

    “Shame on the IOC because you have forsaken the 11 members of your Olympic family. You are discriminating against them because they are Israelis and Jews,” she said.

    'Gentle and peaceful' husband
    She said she remembered the “excitement and dreams” of her “peaceful and gentle” husband when he was chosen to go to the Olympics.

    They were “probably the same dreams Jacques Rogge and [former U.K. athlete and chairman of the London 2012 Games] Sebastian Coe had when they went to the Olympic Games -- the only difference is our loved ones came home in coffins,” Spitzer said.

    She said support for a minute of silence in memory of the Munich Massacre had come from all over the world and “only the International Olympic Committee remained deaf and blind,” prompting a cry of “shame, shame” from the audience.

    Widow of Munich Olympics massacre victim: Switch off IOC chief's speech

    Ilana Romano, widow of weightlifter Yossef Romano, 31, spoke of how she had told her children -- then ages 6, 4 and 18 months -- that their father had been killed.

    “I will never forget that moment when I hugged them, and I could see their lips trembling and their eyes welling up and one question in their mouth: Mom, will dad never come back?” she said, according to a translation of her speech. “I answered in tears: Correct.”

    She said they had been asking for 40 years for “one minute of silence in honor and remembrance of the dead sons of the Olympic movement.”

    Romano said she had asked Rogge, the IOC president, during a face-to-face meeting if any other nation’s athletes had been killed “would you have kept quiet.”

    She said he had replied that this was a “very difficult question,” a reply she said had “hurt and offended” them. “One could feel the discrimination in the air,” she added.

    Olympic ideals 'violated'
    Romano said Rogge would be remembered as an athlete – present at the 1972 Games – who became president and “violated the Olympic Charter calls for brotherhood, friendship and peace.

    Rogge also spoke briefly and was applauded politely when he took to the stage and also when he left.

    Judo medalist helps subdue 'drunken' Olympic bottle-thrower

    “We share a duty to these innocent victims and to history to make sure that the lessons of 1972 are never forgotten,” he said, without addressing the calls for a minute’s silence during an official Olympic event.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    An audience of 850 at the event, including many members of the Jewish community, listens to speakers talk about their experiences during the 1972 Games in Munich and their desire for the IOC to formally recognize those killed during the Games in London.

    At the start of the Guildhall ceremony, the Israeli Olympic team competing in London took to the stage to applause from the crowd.

    Speaking earlier, Israeli swimmer Gal Nevo, who reached the semi-finals of the 200 and 400 individual medley events at London 2012, told NBCNews.com that “you always, as an Israeli, worry a little bit when you travel, especially when you represent Israel.”

    Read more about the Olympics from NBC News

    “This whole ceremony … I wish it was on a bigger stage, not just for the Israeli and Jewish community,” he said. “I think it’s very important everybody remembers what happened and to tell everyone that it can happen again if we’re not aware.”

    However Nevo said the level of security in London was such that “I personally – and I can speak for the rest of us – feel very safe… we feel that someone is taking care of this.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Race to London's Olympic Park: Fastest way is ...?
    • Interpol drops 'red notice' for dissident
    • Journalist: British militants took me hostage in Syria
    • At Hiroshima memorial, Japan leaders vow to listen
    • Olympic hosts: Londoners open their homes to the world
    • Canada lobster fishermen lash out at cheaper US exports
    • Slideshow: The lives of Syria rebels fighting for freedom

    212 comments

    Rogge is nothing but a whimpering, low life politician who didn't want to respect and honor the Israeli athletes killed by the muslim arab scum because "he was afraid the arabs would leave"..read the article. The tragedy of this was a black mark on the olympics and each time there is an olympiad the …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, london, jacques-rogge, uk, 1972, featured, silence, munich-massacre, ankie-spitzer
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