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Olympics: Sochi in final stretch as flame lit in Olympia


Greek actress Ino Menegaki, playing the role of High Priestess, passes the Olympic flame to Greek skier Yannis Andoniou (R), the first torchbearer of the 2014 Sochi torch relay. Yorgos Karahalis / Reuters

ANCIENT OLYMPIA - The Sochi 2014 Winter Olympic torch was lit in ancient Olympia on Sunday, heralding the start of what will be the longest torch relay for any Winter Games, including a trip to space, as Russia prepares to showcase its modern post-Soviet face.

The Black Sea resort of Sochi, the first Russian city to stage a Winter Olympics, will receive the flame on October 5 after a short relay in Greece, to kick off a 123-day odyssey culminating at the opening ceremony on February 7.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is eager to deliver a "brilliant" Games to show how far Russia has come since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

On a hot autumn day, Greek actress Ino Menegaki, playing the high priestess, lit the torch in seconds as the sun's rays bounced off a concave mirror at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics, a ritual first established for the 1936 Berlin Games.

"I hope the Games show the world that Russia is not only salt cucumbers and vodka," Denis Kruzhkov, 40, a university professor from a town near Sochi, told Reuters.

Wrapped in a Russian flag on the green slopes hugging the ancient stadium, he said: "I hope Sochi represents the new Russia. Sochi is multi-national and safe, and sport unites people."

After leaving Greece, the flame will travel to outer space, the bottom of Lake Baikal, the North Pole and Europe's highest peak in the mammoth trek across the vast country, carried by a record 14,000 torch-bearers.

"This is the beginning of an epic journey for the Olympic torch," Sochi Games chief Dmitry Chernyshenko said. "a journey that will change Russia forever."

Olympic limits

It will not be plain sailing for the Russian organizers until the Games opening, however, with mounting international criticism over a new anti-gay propaganda law seen by critics as repressive.

Security in the city near the volatile North Caucasus region is also a major concern with Putin said more needed to be done.

"Just as in ancient Greece, the Olympic Games cannot settle political problems or secure lasting peace between peoples," new International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach said in a brief speech.

"The Olympic flame thus reminds us to be aware of our own Olympic limits."

Human rights groups and some athletes have criticized the International Olympic Committee for failing to do more to press Russia over the new law.

"The IOC is not meant to be a government who imposes laws and regulations," Bach, on his first official assignment since succeeding Jacques Rogge, told Reuters after the ceremony, conducted amid draconian security measures and an unusually small crowd of spectators.

"But we are very clear that we will not tolerate any form of discrimination. The task of the IOC is that the Olympic Charter is applied 100 percent."

Ice hockey player Alexander Ovechkin was the first Russian to run with the torch after Greek Alpine skier Ioannis Antoniou kicked off the relay.

It will eventually travel across 83 regions in Russia and 2,900 settlements on its 65,000 km run through the world's largest country.  - Reuters
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