Rio mayor tears into Olympic organizers over snags

General view of athletes' accommodation can be seen during a guided tour for journalists to the 2016 Rio Olympics Village in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 23, 2016.

Rio de Janeiro's Mayor Eduardo Paes lashed out Friday at the city's Olympics organizing committee, accusing it of "serious problems" in managing the crisis-plagued athletes' village.

In a rare show of disunity a week before the Games, Paes blamed the Rio2016 committee for a slew of problems at the village, which has been his public relations nightmare all week.

"The athletes' village was ready. Then the organizing committee took charge for three months, and there were extremely serious management problems. During those three months, people intruded into the apartments and a lot of things were stolen," he said in an interview with newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo.

"The doors were left half-open. The organizing committee was careless, objectively speaking."

He said his office was informed of the problems only on Thursday last week, despite a series of weekly meetings between his staff and the organizing committee.

Paes's week got off to a rough start Sunday when the Olympic village opened to a boycott from Australia, which refused to move in because of exposed wiring, leaking pipes, blocked toilets, unlighted stairwells and other problems.

The mayor's ensuing quip that he would have a kangaroo placed outside to make the Australians feel at home did not go down well, exploding into a controversy dubbed #kangaroogate on Twitter.

Paes and the Australian delegation chief, Kitty Chiller, buried the hatchet Wednesday, when he apologized for the construction hiccups and presented her a symbolic key to the city.

She gave him a stuffed kangaroo in return. In similar tongue-in-cheek style, the Australians have also installed a kangaroo statue outside the village, alongside an ersatz emu.

But Paes was clearly still smarting from Sunday's controversy.

"It was an unacceptable mistake. Which is too bad, because that was the launch of the Olympics," he said.

"It wasn't a Brazilian in charge of the Olympic village. Only foreigners," he added. "At least people can't say the Brazilians are disorganized. The boss was (Argentine national) Mario Cilenti."

Cilenti, a sporting event manager serving as executive director of the athletes' village, has reportedly been sacked from the job, according to Brazilian media. Rio2016 has not confirmed the reports.

The organizing committee did not immediately reply to requests for comment on Paes's interview.

Brazilian media reports have blamed disgruntled workers for the problems at the village, allegedly the result of sabotage aimed at exacting revenge for salary delays.

Fifteen of the 31 buildings had plumbing problems, ranging from leaks to toilets clogged by cement blocks.

More than 600 plumbers were dispatched to make emergency repairs.

Stoking further controversy, the Brazilian labor ministry said the emergency hires did not have proper working conditions and contracts.

Rio2016 said all problems with the village were fixed by Thursday evening.

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