The 2014 edition of Beijing
International Marathon held on 19th
Oct is in news for wrong reasons. The organisers warned runners to expect slight
or moderate smog, but the US embassy in Beijing said air quality early on
Sunday was "hazardous". BBC
report quoting a resident of the city states that the air smelt like burnt
coal. Despite heavy pollution blanketing Beijing on Sunday, the marathon went ahead, with face masks and
sponges among the equipment used by competitors to battle the smog. The
marathon's organizing committee said late Saturday that postponing the event
would be difficult because of all the planning that had gone into it, and asked
competitors to understand, the Beijing News reported. It said 46 percent of the
competitors had traveled from abroad and other parts of China to take part.
About 30,000 people were
expected to take part in the marathon and the half-marathon. The organizing
committee made 140,000 sponges available at supply stations along the marathon
route so runners could "clean their skin that is exposed to the air,"
the Beijing News reported. The U.S. Embassy, which tracks the Beijing air from
a monitoring station on its roof and uses a different air quality index, said
the air was hazardous. It gave a reading of 344 micrograms per cubic meter of
PM2.5 particulate matter. The World Health Organization considers 25 micrograms
within a 24-hour period a safe level.
Chas mask before and after
China's pollution is
notorious following years of rapid economic development. Combating the problem
has shot up the agenda of the ruling Communist Party, which is under pressure
from citizens who are tired of breathing smog. British runner Chas Pope, 39, dropped out midway stating that at 10km a look
at the state of the mask made him take that decision. At the finish line, athletes tried not to let
worries about air quality take the shine off their pride in their performance.
“I'm used to the pollution,“ said local runner Liu Fan, who ran 32km of the
42km race. His wife handed him a bunch of flowers, describing conditions as
“terrible.“ One entrant sported a large green gas mask, while others opted for
more modest white face coverings. Chinese actor Yuan Hong pulled out of the
race, writing on his verified microblog account: “The air quality is too poor!
Competitor A1659 has decided to quit.“
Reportedly some top
long-distance athletes stayed away from the race, which was won by Ethiopia's
Girmay Birhanu Gebru in two hours, 10 minutes and 42 seconds. His compatriot
Fatuma Sado Dergo was the fastest woman with a time of 2:30:03. The winner(s)
will not surprise people as runners from Africa- more specifically Kenya and
Ethiopia in East Africa — have been
dominating and have been winning marathons everywhere.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
20th Oct 2014.
