GHN offers analysis report published recently by BBC about security situation in
Sochi prior to the start of Winter Olympic Games 2014.
There is only one road
into Sochi from the rest of Russia - a narrow, winding road that hugs the
coast.
As you drive towards
Sochi along the road, you have to go through a huge concrete checkpoint in the
tiny hamlet of Magri, around 60 miles (100 km) short of the city centre.
For the duration of the
Winter Olympics only vehicles registered in Sochi - and those with special
permission - are being allowed through the checkpoint.
We watched as every bus,
truck and car was thoroughly searched by police officers with sniffer dogs. The
checkpoint is being overseen by Russia's internal security service, the FSB.
Apart from the road, and
the single railway line, Sochi is effectively cut off from the outside world.
It is a long coastal
strip bordered by the Caucasus Mountains to the north-east and the Black Sea to
the south-west.
The border crossing to
Abkhazia - a region of Georgia which has declared independence - is shut to
vehicles for the duration of the Games.
In the sea off the
Olympic Park we spotted high-speed naval boats and a mysterious ship bristling
with communications masts. Named "Seliger", it was commissioned in
December 2012 and was described at the time as a "deep-sea research
vessel".
The mountains are being
guarded by the Russian army.
The Olympics are split
between the "coastal cluster" of ice rinks by the Black Sea in the
Sochi suburb of Adler, and the "mountain cluster" of skiing and
sliding events at Krasnaya Polyana.
All along the road
between the two we saw "hides" in the woods, concealing soldiers in
white Arctic suits.
On some sections of the
road the "hides" are placed every few hundred metres - usually a
small white tent with a green camouflaged sentry tent beside it.
The army have taken over
the old road up the valley from where they can look down on the new roads and
railway line built for the Olympics.
The railway stations and
airports have visibly higher security too.
Obvious threat
These Games will have
more obvious security than any previous winter or summer Olympics.
"President Putin
has said that 40,000 people from our police and armed services will be involved
in securing the games," Alexander Zhukov, the head of Russia's Olympic
committee explained.
"At the same time
we are also doing everything to ensure the maximum security during the Games
doesn't bother the spectators, the athletes, the tourists - so that it doesn't
interfere with the sporting party," he said.
Next to the brand-new
power station overlooking the Olympic Park we found a sizeable anti-aircraft
battery, with two radar dishes and a cluster of vehicles loaded with missiles.
But Alexander Zhukov insisted it was nothing unusual.
The Olympic Park has its
own CCTV control room with police officers monitoring hundreds of security
cameras.
There is a control room
for the whole city too, with another 1,400 cameras being checked day and night.
The threat is obvious.
The Games are being
staged only a few hundred miles from the most violent insurgency in Europe.
The Russian Caucasus
republics of Dagestan, Chechnya and Ingushetia are the focus of a revolt by
militant Islamists who use suicide bombings, assassinations, and attacks on the
army and police in their struggle to build an Islamic Caliphate in the
Caucasus.
British security
officials wrote that: "Attacks are very likely to occur in Russia in the
run up to or during the Games. They are occurring irrespective of the event,
particularly in the Dagestan region.
"Imarat Kavkaz (the
Caucasus Emirate) is the main threat and has repeatedly expressed a desire to
target the Games. In July 2013… Doku Umarov (one of the leaders of the Caucasus
Emirate) called for followers to do what was necessary to disrupt them."
That thesis is supported
by Professor Mark Galeotti of New York University, and an expert on Russian
security.
"I think it's
almost guaranteed that there will be attacks elsewhere. There may even be
attacks on Sochi, particularly probing the outer rim of the security
zone," Mark Galeotti warned.
"Because let's face
it, if a suicide bomber drives a car into a checkpoint and explodes it - even
though that's no real threat to the athletes or spectators - it still gets the
headlines on Sochi."
'Safe city'
In Volgograd, one of the
main cities in southern Russia, 34 people died in December in two suicide bomb
attacks on successive days - at the main railway station and on a trolley bus.
The attacks were claimed
- in a suicide video - by two men who said they were from Vilayat Dagestan, a
group which is part of the wider Imarat Kavkaz.
They warned of further
attacks including on Sochi itself.
Doku Umarov has called
for his followers to do everything they can to disrupt what he called
"these Satanic Games".
The attacks immediately
re-awakened the security concerns surrounding the Winter Olympics.
"At the moment the
rebels are winning," Professor Galeotti said.
"The rebels are
getting everyone talking about security, and therefore they're turning the
Games from being what Putin meant them to be - a triumph for Russia - into a
story about Russian insecurity and Russian failings."
British security
officials, however, do not believe it will be so easy to attack Sochi itself.
"Volgograd shows a
capability against that city but this can't translate to Sochi where Russian
military operations and greater distance from Dagestan will pose a greater
challenge," their assessment reads.
Alexei Navalny - the
opposition leader who is one of President Vladimir Putin's fiercest critics -
also thinks it is unlikely that Sochi itself will be attacked.
"I think that the
security measures which are in place will guarantee security in Sochi," he
said. "Of course this region isn't very stable, but in the end I'm sure
that the Russian state is capable of ensuring security in the Olympic zone.
"When people hear
Caucasus they think that Chechnya and Sochi are five kilometers apart. That's
not the case - there's a large distance between them. You need to remember that
Putin's summer residence is in Sochi, so Sochi is considered a safe city."
A safe city now guarded
by 40,000 police officers and troops, at least one anti-aircraft battery and a
flotilla of naval craft.