Russian President Vladimir Putin has announced the start of the Russian leg of the record-breaking Olympic torch relay for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics. The relay kicked off at Moscow’s Red Square, where the flame arrived on Sunday.
The first people to carry the torch around Kremlin were aspiring Russian ice-skaters Lina Fyodorova, 16, of Moscow and Maksim Miroshkin, 19, of Ekaterinburg. The pair won silver medals at the 2012 Junior Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, and took first place at the 2013 Russian skating championships.
Russian bobsleigh racer, Irina Skvortsova, was also among the torch bearers. Skvortsova, who has undergone several dozen operations following a high speed collision incident in Germany, threw off her crutch to proudly carry the Olympic flame.
In his speech at the torch relay ceremony, the Russian President said the Olympic flame would travel through all regions of country, and “will show Russia to the world as it really is, as the one we all love.” Russia’s scale, unique character and beauty, including its natural and cultural wealth, will be on full display during the relay, Putin said.
Putin thanked all the people taking part in the longest Olympic torch relay ever, saying that every one of the 14,000 relay participants – which include notable public figures, athletes, teachers, doctors, students and veterans – has “earned the right to become part of Olympic history.”
The President added he was sure the Olympic flame will “light the hearts of millions of people, and the Olympic torch, designed in the shape of a feather of the magic firebird, will bring luck and joy” to the multicultural society of Russia.
At one point during the Olympic torch’s Kremlin run the audience gasped as strong wind apparently put the flame off. However, the torch was promptly relit with the help of a security guard.
The Olympic flame was lit in Athens exactly 7 days ago. The flame was flown in from Greece in two small lanterns and arrived in Moscow earlier Sunday to the welcome of a guard of rifle-bearing soldiers.
“Today can truly be called a historic day for us,” Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak, who headed the delegation to Greece, said upon arrival. “We – all Russians – have a right to be proud”.
It’s been 33 years since the flame lit in Athens was in Russia – then the Soviet Union – for the Summer Games [Moscow 1980]. The rare event will make it a very special moment for every single person carrying the torch – and it will pass through thousands of hands as it goes across the country.
Among the lucky first ones to welcome the Olympic flame on Russian soil are bikers who are accompanying the torch all the way from the airport to the center of Moscow. The leader of the Night Wolves biker club, Aleksandr ‘Surgeon’ Zaldostanov shared his feelings about it with RT.
“The last time the Olympic flame was in Russia was a long time ago and we don’t know when the next time will be that it will arrive here, so the fact that we, the “Night wolves” are going to convoy the Olympic flame is a very honorable mission. There will be many people with major sporting achievements among us, one of the bikers is a very famous Russian sportsman, Olympic champion and a trainer of the Russian national team,” the Night Wolves leader said.
It’s estimated that on its way from the Russian capital to the 2014 Winter Olympics host-city of Sochi, the torch will travel:
20,273 km by car
25,455 km by plane
17,728 km by train
2,256 km by helicopter
1 km by sleigh
The record-breaking 65,000 km long relay across the biggest country in the world will see the flame go through 83 Russian regions, 2,900 towns and settlements before it reaches its final destination in the city of Sochi at the brand-new Olympic stadium on the Black Sea resort on February 7, 2014.
Before it gets there, it will be taken all the way up Mount Elbrus, the highest peak in Europe. We will also see it dive to the bottom of Lake Baikal – the oldest and the deepest lake in the world. We’ll even watch it blast into space on board the Russian Soyuz rocket. As Dmitry Kozak said, it will shed light on a lot of what Russia has to offer.
“It is a very important event first of all for Russia as a nation and for its regions, as it is a chance to show their own culture, traditions and investment opportunities,” Kozak said. “The Olympic torch relay will grab the attention of the whole world through the mass media. It is an important factor in the cultural, social and economic development of the Russian regions.”