Putin calls for bobsleigh site to be moved-media

MOSCOW - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Thursday called for the transfer of a proposed Olympic bobsleigh site over ecological concerns, Russian media reported.

The planned Sochi-2014 Winter Olympics venue, next to a mountain nature preserve above Russia's summer resort city on the Black Sea, was criticised by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) last month as ‘environmentally unfriendly’.

‘I consider it necessary to move these venues to another site, as agreed with the International Olympic Committee,’ Putin said at a meeting with Russian Olympic officials in Sochi, news agency RIA said.

In a nine-page summary of its April inspection, UNEP said Grushevy Ridge, where the bobsleigh course and competitors' accommodation had been due to be built, is home to endangered flora and fauna.

As the official consultant to the International Olympic Committee for environmental protection up to and through the 2014 Olympic Games, UNEP visited Sochi's proposed venue sites at the invitation of the Russian government.

A source close to the Russian government told Reuters: ‘They have taken the environmental concerns very seriously, including the UN report, particularly when it comes to Grushevy Ridge.’

Russian and international environmental organisations had also been calling for the bobsleigh site to be moved from Grushevy Ridge, and Greenpeace said it had proposed 16 alternative sites.

Greenpeace Russia hailed Thursday's announcement.

‘The environment of the Caucasus has taken the first Olympic victory,’ Vera Bakasheva, Greenpeace Russia's spokeswoman, said in a statement.

‘There is every hope that the Sochi games will for certain be 'green', as the Olympic charter calls for.’