Is Paris too delinquent to host the 2024 Olympic Games?
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron fought hard to have the Union of 
European Football Associations final of the Champions League hosted in Paris 
when the prior venue of Saint Petersburg, Russia, was nixed when the fighting 
broke out between Ukraine and Russia. “For Macron, officials said, swiping the 
final from Russia was seen as a coup,” Politico reported on Feb. 25, as the 
league announced the change of venue to the Stade de France in the northern 
Parisian suburbs of Saint-Denis.
In the run-up to the May 28 event, trouble was already being foreshadowed. 
French professional football coach and former FIFA World Cup and UEFA gold top 
scoring medalist, Thierry Henry, told a CBS Sports broadcast on May 8, during a 
discussion about the upcoming championship: “Technically, the stadium is in 
Saint-Denis, not in Paris. Trust me, you don’t want to be in Saint-Denis. It’s 
not the same as Paris.”
The city’s mayor fired back at Henry on Facebook. “The contempt with which you 
have characterized our city is not acceptable,” Mayor Mathieu Hanotin said. “The 
situation in the suburbs today is the result of a concentration of poverty on 
the outskirts of Paris and an abandonment of the State for working-class 
neighborhoods (…) This failure of public policies should not be a pretext for 
ridicule from well-known personalities.”
Even the town’s own mayor is hardly denying that there’s a major security 
problem. Because to do so would be virtually impossible, or else suggest a major 
disconnect with reality so dire that it would warrant psychological assessment.
Saint-Denis is routinely ranked as one of the most dangerous cities in France. 
According to Le Figaro newspaper, Saint-Denis has a personal property and theft 
rate that more than doubles the national average, and a personal violence rate 
over three times higher. The city was also the site of a major police raid for 
harboring the alleged perpetrators of the Nov. 13, 2015, terrorist attacks on 
the Bataclan concert hall, Stade de France, and the sidewalk patios of several 
restaurants and cafes, which killed 130 people and injured another 413.
So it’s hardly surprising that when supporters of Real Madrid and Liverpool F.C. 
descended on Saint-Denis’ Stade de France for game day, visitors reported 
insecurity problems. Jason McAteer, former Liverpool player, told the British 
press that his wife was mugged and his son was attacked. Both the league and 
French authorities blamed Liverpool fans, some of whom had been suckered into 
buying fake tickets, for causing a bottleneck at the entry that sparked further 
unrest, with videos posted to social media showing young fans and locals 
exploiting the situation by hopping over the gates to gain free entry.
As police lost control of the situation, unable to separate the troublemakers 
from families with legitimate tickets, they simply opened fire indiscriminately 
on the crowd with tear gas. Meanwhile, the kickoff was delayed by a puzzlingly 
precise 36 minutes to 9:36 p.m. local time, while other attendees grappled with 
a local transit strike of transport workers whose unions had declared their 
intention to deliberately target the event with their job action.
British culture minister Nadine Dorries has since demanded that the league probe 
French police actions during the incident. The least shocked by the series of 
incidents were the French people, who have grown accustomed to the routine tear 
gassing of protests in the capital as a means of basic crowd control. The Yellow 
Vest protests, which dominated the streets of Paris and other French cities for 
months prior to the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, resulted in the loss of a 
couple dozen eyes and five hands, attributed by victims to police action.
Meanwhile, tourists on the ritzy Champs-Elysees have returned home in the past 
few years with memories of being doused with tear gas. So clearly little has 
changed with respect to French authorities’ ability to manage a potent mix of 
growing organic insecurity coupled with the chaos of spontaneous crowds. Which 
raises the question of how France will manage the 2024 Paris summer Olympics, 
particularly with the athletes’ village and several of the slated sporting 
events set to be based in Saint-Denis.
Last year, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo evoked in Paris Match magazine the future 
“legacy” of the games, “first of all for Seine-Saint-Denis, the youngest, most 
cosmopolitan department in France and which needed this trust granted.” Well, 
“cosmopolitan” is one way to put it. Another way is that if you fail to place 
external barriers or standards to protect your country, you’ll eventually find 
yourself erecting them everywhere internally — or else dealing with chaos borne 
of your delusion.
Speaking of fantasies, recent former Socialist Party presidential candidate 
Hidalgo also spearheaded the concept of the open-air opening ceremonies for the 
2024 Games. For the first time ever, according to the Paris 2024 website, the 
opening ceremonies “will be held in the heart of the city, along its main 
artery, the Seine.” While admittedly creative, it nonetheless smacks of a 
security nightmare. But that’s generally what you tend to get when you replace 
pragmatic realism with ideologically fueled fantasy.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN