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JO 2024 Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo swims in the Seine, accompanied by Tony Estanguet in Paris JO

17 July 2024


Anne Hidalgo’s dip in the water came just nine days before the opening ceremony of the Paris Games.

AFTER MONTHS OF anticipation, Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo has finally taken a swim in the Seine River, nine days before the opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games.

The move is part of a broader effort to showcase the river’s improved cleanliness ahead of the Summer Games which will kick off 26 July.

The Seine will host several open water swimming events during the Games, including marathon swimming at the Olympic Games and the swimming legs of the Olympic and Paralympic triathlons.

Clad in a wetsuit, Hidalgo plunged into the river near the imposing-looking City Hall, her office, and Notre Dame Cathedral.

“It’s wonderful, very, very pleasant,” Hidalgo told reporters of the greenish water. “It’s fresh but not cold.”

Paris 2024 chief Tony Estanguet and the top government official for the Paris region, Marc Guillaume, joined her in the water.

“Today is a confirmation that we are exactly where we are meant to be,” Estanguet said. “We are now ready to organise the Games in the Seine.”

President Emmanuel Macron, who had promised to join the Seine bathers, was a notable absentee on Wednesday as he is occupied by a political crisis caused by his decision to call snap parliamentary elections last month.

The swim fulfils a promise Hidalgo made months ago to show the river is clean enough to host open-swimming competitions during the 2024 Games.

She had originally planned to swim last month, but had to delay because water tests showed that E.Coli bacteria – a key indicator of faecal matter – were sometimes up to 10 times higher than authorised limits.

On the initial date, the hashtag “jechiedanslaSeine” (“I’m pooping in the Seine”) trended on social media as some threatened to protest the Olympics by defecating upstream.

Since 2015, organisers have invested heavily – €1.3 billion – to prepare the Seine for the Olympics and to ensure Parisians have a cleaner river in the years after the Games.

The plan included constructing a giant underground water storage basin in central Paris, renovating sewer infrastructure, and upgrading wastewater treatment plants.

Despite being a recurring promise among politicians, swimming in the Seine has been banned for over a century.

Jacques Chirac, the former French president, made a similar pledge in 1988 when he was Paris mayor, but it was never realised.

However, Hidalgo plans to create three public bathing areas in the Seine for the city’s residents next year – a century after swimming was banned – while fish and other organisms are also returning to the waterway in greater numbers.

Hidalgo follows in the footsteps of French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera, who swam in the Seine on Saturday wearing a full-body suit.

The Olympic events remain weather-dependent and heavy rain on the eve of the triathlon or open-water swimming could lead to problems.

In the worst-case scenario, the swimming for the triathlon would be cancelled, while the open-water swimming could be moved from the Seine to a water course east of Paris.

Heavy rain in May and June have also disrupted preparations for the Seine-based opening ceremony, during which thousands of athletes are set to sail down the river.

Organisers have had to postpone rehearsals repeatedly because of the strength of the currents.

#Cleanliness #AnneHidalgo #SeineParis #OlympicGames

Did You Know

About Seine river
The Seine is a 777-kilometre-long river in northern France. Its drainage basin is in the Paris Basin covering most of northern France. It rises at Source-Seine, 30 kilometres northwest of Dijon in northeastern France in the Langres plateau, flowing through Paris and into the English Channel at Le Havre. The Seine remains central to French life, culture and identity. The port of Le Havre at the mouth of the Seine is France's largest international shipping port, and the river runs through the wealthiest and most populated of the 27 administrative regions of France, known as ĂŽle-de-France or the Paris Region.

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