Olympic flame to burn near Louvre during Paris Games
![Olympic flame to burn near Louvre during Paris Games Olympic flame to burn near Louvre during Paris Games](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/99370/conversions/Olympic-flame-Paris-2024-og_image.webp)
Olympics - Paris 2024 organisers to reveal torch route from Marseille to Paris - Sorbonne University, Paris, France - June 23, 2023 A screen displays an image of the Olympic flame being passed on during the presentation REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq
The Olympic flame is set to burn in the Tuileries
Garden in front of the Louvre museum for the duration of the Paris Games in
July and August, a source involved in the discussions told AFP.
The decision to place the Olympic cauldron in the
tourist hotspot in the centre of the city was taken "several weeks
ago", the source said on condition of anonymity.
"The Tuileries emerged as the first choice because of the ease of access for the public," the source said.
There had been speculation that the flame might be placed on the Eiffel Tower, while organisers also contemplated putting it in the courtyard of the Louvre, the world's biggest museum, the source said.
The Tuileries "is an area that can be easily secured. There will be security forces on duty round the clock to protect the flame and the general public will be able to see it thanks to the raised footpaths around the garden," the source added.
There had been speculation that the flame might be
placed on the Eiffel Tower, while organisers also contemplated putting it in
the courtyard of the Louvre, the world's biggest museum, the source said.
The Tuileries "is an area that can be easily
secured. There will be security forces on duty round the clock to protect the
flame and the general public will be able to see it thanks to the raised
footpaths around the garden," the source added.
The lighting of the cauldron is a key moment
during the Olympics opening ceremony, signalling the formal start of the global
sports extravaganza.
It was unclear if the cauldron would be lit inside
the Tuileries or whether it would be transferred there after the unprecedented
opening ceremony on July 26, which is set to take place on boats along the
nearby river Seine.
The identity of the person given the honour of
lighting it remains unknown, while details about the opening ceremony -- which
will take place outside of the athletics stadium for the first time -- are a
closely guarded secret.
Organisers have vowed to make the first Olympics
in Paris in 100 years "iconic".
Asked about the cauldron, the Paris organising
committee said in a statement to AFP that "we will not confirm or deny any
of the reports that are circulating. There have already been a lot of rumours
on its location."
Organisers want the cauldron to be "placed in
the heart of Paris for its symbolism and so that it is visible for
everyone," the statement added.
The Paris Games are set to take place at locations
around the capital, including at temporary stadiums by the Eiffel Tower and on
the Place de la Concorde which abuts the Tuileries Garden.
The park was designed in 1664 at the behest of the
so-called "Sun King" Louis XIV and is closely associated with the
defunct French royal family, as well as the anti-monarchist Revolution of 1789.
The torch relay for Paris 2024 will begin on April
16 when a flame is taken from Olympia in Greece before being transported by sea
to Marseille in a three-masted 19th-century French tall ship called the Belum.
The flame is then set to travel through 400 French
towns and dozens of tourist attractions during a 12,000-kilometre (7,500-mile)
journey over the mainland and overseas French territories in the Caribbean,
Indian Ocean and Pacific.
At the last Covid-disrupted Olympics in Tokyo in
2021, the hydrogen-powered cauldron was lit by tennis star Naomi Osaka inside
the eerily empty main athletics stadium during the opening ceremony.
A second one was placed on the waterfront near
Tokyo Bay.
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