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Olympic protesters in Milan denounce the impact of Games on the environment

Olympic protesters in Milan denounce the impact of Games on the environment
Olympic protesters in Milan denounce the impact of Games on the environment

On the first full day of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, thousands of people protested in the streets of Milan on Saturday over rising housing costs and concerns about the environment.

The march is being organised by housing rights groups, grassroots unions and community centre activists. It aims to bring attention to what activists describe as an unsustainable city model, marked by rising rents and increasing inequality.

The Olympics bring to an end a decade of property boom in Milan following the 2015 World Expo. Locals are squeezed by rising living costs, as an Italian tax plan for wealthy new residents and Brexit attract professionals to the financial capital.

Some groups claim that the Olympics were a wasteful use of resources and public money, citing infrastructure projects which they claim have "damaged" the environment in mountainous communities.

A banner hung across the street said: "Let’s take back cities, let’s free the mountain."

CARDBOARD TREE SYMBOLISES DESTRUCTION

Stefano Nutini (71), standing under a Communist Refoundation Party flag, said: "I am here because the?Olympics is unsustainable - economically, socially and environmentally."

He said that the Olympic infrastructure had "placed a burden on the mountain towns hosting events during the first widely distributed edition of the Winter Games".

The International Olympic Committee, or IOC, points out that Games use existing facilities to make them more sustainable.

About 50 people led the procession carrying stylised cardboard trees that they claimed represented the larches that were cut down to build a new track for bobsleigh in Cortina.

Another banner read: "Century old trees, survivors of two wars...sacrificed 90 seconds on a bobsleigh course costing 124 millions (euros)"

March takes place under tight security

Police estimates indicate that more than 5,000 participants took part in the march.

The protesters started from the Medaglie d'Oro square and walked for nearly four kilometres (2,5 miles) to end up in Corvetto's south-eastern quarter. Corvetto is a working-class area of Milan.

According to an interior ministry count, a rally by the hard left in Turin last weekend turned violent. More than 100 police officers were injured, and more than 30 protesters were arrested.

Saturday's demonstration follows a series actions in the lead-up to Games. These included rallies the eve before the opening ceremony that denounced U.S. ICE presence in Italy and what activists described as the economic and social burdens of Olympic project.

It is a tight-knit security situation as Milan hosts thousands of athletes, world leaders and visitors, including U.S. vice president JD Vance, for the global sports event. (Reporting and writing by Emilio Parodi; Editing by Keith Weir).

(source: Reuters)