Olympic Surfers Sleep on Cruise Ship in Tahiti, a 1st for the Games

Paris 2024 Olympics - Surfing - Women's Round 1 - Teahupo'o, Tahiti, French Polynesia - July 27, 2024. A rainbow is seen near the judging towers. Ben Thouard/Pool via REUTERS
Paris 2024 Olympics - Surfing - Women's Round 1 - Teahupo'o, Tahiti, French Polynesia - July 27, 2024. A rainbow is seen near the judging towers. Ben Thouard/Pool via REUTERS
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Olympic Surfers Sleep on Cruise Ship in Tahiti, a 1st for the Games

Paris 2024 Olympics - Surfing - Women's Round 1 - Teahupo'o, Tahiti, French Polynesia - July 27, 2024. A rainbow is seen near the judging towers. Ben Thouard/Pool via REUTERS
Paris 2024 Olympics - Surfing - Women's Round 1 - Teahupo'o, Tahiti, French Polynesia - July 27, 2024. A rainbow is seen near the judging towers. Ben Thouard/Pool via REUTERS

Cardboard beds might be Paris' solution to providing athletes a place to sleep for the 2024 Olympics. But some 10,000 miles away in Tahiti, where the surfing competition is taking place, it's a cruise ship.
About 45 minutes from the surfing venue, the Aranui 5 ship is able to accommodate about 230 passengers in over 100 cabins, with eight guest decks, a spa and gym, according to its website. It's anchored just off shore and the surfers, coaches and others take small boats to get back and forth, The Associated Press reported.
“They have a wonderful location for the village, which is on a ship,” French Polynesian President Moetai Brotherson told AP. “It’s unusual, but they seem to like it.”
While media have been restricted from boarding the ship, athletes have shared photos and video on their social media that offer a glimpse into what the Olympics say is the first-ever floating athlete village.
“I think our athlete village in Tahiti is better than the actual one in Paris,” surfer Kanoa Igarashi of Japan said on TikTok, sharing a video tour of the accommodations.
In the video, he shows the amenities on board, including a 24-hour dining hall, fully stocked Olympic gift store and activity center with ping pong and foosball tables.
Matt Scorringe, a coach traveling with the New Zealand surfing team, shared an Instagram video from the ship showing a pool with a statue of the Olympic rings at one end.
On TikTok, German surfer Tim Elter posted the sea view from his cabin, jokingly tapping the bed frame, saying how it's not cardboard like those at the Olympic village for athletes in Paris.
The ship helps alleviate some of the larger-than-usual crowds and need for new buildings that locals and activists said could affect the small town at the end of the road on the small island.
Not all athletes competing in Tahiti are staying on the ship.
Some national teams or individuals have rented houses closer to the waves, sharing photos of boardwalks leading from their back doors to the shore, communal dinners with teammates and lush green lawns lined with palm trees.



Olympics-Swimming-Palestinian Flies the Flag in Paris Pool

Paris 2024 Olympics - Swimming - Men's 100m Backstroke - Heats - Paris La Defense Arena, Nanterre, France - July 28, 2024. Yazan Al Bawwab of Palestine reacts. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne Purchase Licensing Rights
Paris 2024 Olympics - Swimming - Men's 100m Backstroke - Heats - Paris La Defense Arena, Nanterre, France - July 28, 2024. Yazan Al Bawwab of Palestine reacts. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne Purchase Licensing Rights
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Olympics-Swimming-Palestinian Flies the Flag in Paris Pool

Paris 2024 Olympics - Swimming - Men's 100m Backstroke - Heats - Paris La Defense Arena, Nanterre, France - July 28, 2024. Yazan Al Bawwab of Palestine reacts. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne Purchase Licensing Rights
Paris 2024 Olympics - Swimming - Men's 100m Backstroke - Heats - Paris La Defense Arena, Nanterre, France - July 28, 2024. Yazan Al Bawwab of Palestine reacts. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne Purchase Licensing Rights

Palestinian swimmer Yazan Al Bawwab's sole Olympic race lasted less than a minute but just being in the water was a statement in itself.

The 24-year-old pointed to a Palestinian flag on his chest as he explained what it meant to represent a homeland not just lacking a pool but struggling for basics like food and water.

"France does not recognize Palestine. Yet here I am with a flag on my chest," he said after finishing third in a 100 metres backstroke heat that proved to be his first and last swim of the Paris Games.

"I'm very, very happy ... to raise my flag, to have time just for Palestine, a lane just for Palestine. I think this is my message of peace.

"We're trying to get the world to know that we're human beings. I can play sports like everybody else," he told reporters, Reuters reported.

France said in May that conditions were not right to officially recognize a Palestinian state and any decision must be more than symbolic or political posturing.

More than 39,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive in Gaza, say local health authorities.

The only Israeli swimmer in the 100 backstroke was in a later heat to Al Bawwab and their paths did not cross.

Al Bawwab, an aerospace engineer born in Saudi Arabia, educated in Canada and Britain, living in Dubai where he runs a furniture business and also half-Italian, said his father had been a homeless refugee in Italy before rebuilding his life.

"I look at people like my dad who came from nothing," he said. "I'm never complaining in the pool, I remember people in Gaza, people in Palestine that suffer properly. I don't mind if I'm waking up at 5am. It's not a problem."

The twice Olympian spoke of the consequences of conflict.

"A lot of people don't want us to be here. They don't want to see the flag. They don't want to hear my country's name," he said. "They don't want me to exist. They want me to leave. But I'm here."

He said, without naming anyone, that some people had shown hostility to the six-strong Palestine team at other competitions.

"People telling us to 'take off your flag, take off your shirt. We don't want to see Palestine on it'," he said. "Imagine if it was your country."

Al Bawwab said an Asian Games roommate, a team coach, had been killed in Gaza. A young fan who sent a message of support was also dead.

A runner friend had posted photos of himself "bandaged up, trying to eat some rice".

"I don't like to comment too much on that. But just know this is the reality of a Palestinian swimmer, a Palestinian athlete. We all have stories," he said.

Al Bawwab mentioned Gaza 100kg weightlifter Mohammad Hamada who had lost 20 kg "because he didn't have food" and failed to qualify.

"We're trying to educate people about how to swim and teach ... but there's a war going on," he said. "What are you supposed to do when there's a war? You can't talk to people."