Threat in Hungary about Sochi attacks considered a hoax

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BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — An email in Russian and English
threatening national Olympic delegations and athletes with terrorist
attacks at the Sochi Winter Games is a hoax, not a real danger,
officials said Wednesday.
Hungarian sports officials, who first
reported the email, said they have received assurances from the
International Olympic Committee and from the Sochi organizers that the
email had no merit. In light of that, the Hungarian Olympic Committee
said it will still take part in the Winter Games, which run from Feb.
7-23.
Olympic committees from several other European countries,
including Germany, Britain and Austria, said they had also received a
similar message. None would share them with The Associated Press.
Wolfgang
Eichler, spokesman for the Austrian National Olympic Committee, said
the email was a hoax that officials had seen before.
"It’s a fake
mail from a sender in Israel, who has been active with various threats
for a few years," Eichler told Austrian news agency APA. "It’s been
checked out because it also arrived two years ago."
The IOC repeated its stance that it "takes security very seriously."
"(We
will) pass on any credible information to the relevant security
services," the IOC said in a statement. "However, in this case it seems
like the email sent to the Hungarian Olympic Committee contains no
threat and appears to be a random message from a member of the public."
Security
is a major concern at all Olympics but especially in Sochi, which is in
southern Russia just a few hundred miles (kilometers) away a simmering
Islamic insurgency in the North Caucasus. One Islamic militant warlord
has urged his followers to attack the Sochi Olympics, Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s pet project.
Earlier, Bence Szabo, secretary
general of the Hungarian Olympic committee, told the sports daily
Nemzeti Sport that the message included threats about a terrorist attack
in Sochi and urged the Hungarian delegation to stay away from the
Winter Games.
Germany’s national Olympic association, the DOSB,
also said it had received "several times the same mail with unspecific,
general warnings" and it had sent it onto security officials.
Many officials said national committees get Olympic threats fairly often.
"We
are not aware of any threats that have been deemed as credible being
directed toward our delegation," British Olympic Association spokesman
Darryl Seibel told the AP. "Organizations such as ours receive email
correspondence all the time — some of which seem to lack in
credibility."
A spokeswoman for the Switzerland’s Olympic
committee said similar threats were common so close to the Winter Games
and athletes and officials would base their travel plans instead on the
assessment of security officials.
"This is kind of an everyday mail. This is normal before every Olympics," Martina Gasner told
the AP.
"If
they (security officials) say you can go to Sochi, we will go. And if
one day they say it’s too dangerous and we command you not to go, then
we will change our plans," she added.
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Graham Dunbar in Geneva, Stephen Wilson and Rob Harris in London and Nesha Starcevic in Frankfurt
contributed.
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.

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