London 2012: Olympic torch tops the London Eye - The Guardian London 2012: Olympic torch tops the London Eye - The Guardian
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London 2012: Olympic torch tops the London Eye - The Guardian

London 2012: Olympic torch tops the London Eye - The Guardian

Amelia Hempleman-Adams takes the Olympic Torch to the top of the London Eye Link to this video

The Olympic Torch reached new heights on Sunday as it was held aloft on the London Eye.

Amelia Hempleman-Adams, who became the youngest person to ski to the South Pole aged just 16, grinned from ear to ear as she held the flame on top of a capsule on board the giant wheel.

Olympic torch on London Eye Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA

Illuminated by early morning sunshine, the 17-year-old daughter of adventurer David Hempleman-Adams held on tight as she raised the torch above the sleepy capital shortly after 8am.

And she kept a tight grip as she posed with the flame at a height much greater than nearby Big Ben.

Amelia Hempleman-Adams on the London Eye Amelia Hempleman-Adams poses with the Olympic Flame on top of the London Eye. Photograph: Lewis Whyld/AP

The young explorer, who carried out her record-breaking expedition with her father last December, described it as a "once in a lifetime" opportunity.

The stunt was suggested to the teenager, who told the BBC: "I decided to see what I'd have to do, thought about it and decided to do it.

"It was amazing to look out and see the whole of London."

Amelia, who has tickets for the athletics and diving events, added: "The height was quite scary but you know you're safe so it's not too bad. It was a once in a lifetime experience, especially as the Olympics are in London. It makes it more special."

The flame will later be carried by former world heavyweight boxing champion Lennox Lewis as it makes its way through the London boroughs of Redbridge, Barking & Dagenham, Havering and Bexley on day 65 of the relay.

It began the day at Redbridge Cycling Centre, where the first torchbearer of the day, Luke Benjafield, 20, from South Woodford, carried the flame through a corridor of cyclists from local clubs.

He was nominated for the role due to his dedication to the Air Training Corps 241 Squadron, where he has inspired and motivated many cadets to succeed in their flight training.

The torch was then taken across Fairlop Lake in a boat accompanied by London Youth Games sailors.

Later on Sunday, Britain's Got Talent-winning street dance troupe Diversity will carry the flame on to the stage at the Dagenham Town Show.

Havering will host the flame next, where Chinese concert pianist Lang Lang, 30, will take it on to a stage outside the Queen's Theatre in Hornchurch and Olympic rower Ben Hunt-Davies will also be a torchbearer.

Hunt-Davies, who competed in three Olympic Games and won a gold medal in Sydney in 2000, went on to volunteer at the Beijing Games and has been an ambassador for the London 2012 bid.

The torch will then become waterborne for the second time when it is transported across the Thames in a London Fire Brigade fireboat accompanied by a flotilla of smaller craft.

Once in Bexley, it will be carried to Danson Park, where Lewis will light a cauldron as part of the evening celebrations and pop duo Rizzle Kicks and dance act Twist And Pulse will perform.

The flame came within a stone's throw of the Olympic Park yesterday when it was carried through Stratford after starting its London journey earlier in the day at the Greenwich Royal Observatory.



London 2012: Olympic Torch reaches new heights on London Eye - Daily Telegraph

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Amelia Hempleman-Adams, who became the youngest person to ski to the South Pole when aged just 16, grinned from ear to ear as she held the flame on top of a capsule on board the giant wheel. Illuminated by early morning sunshine, the 17-year-old daughter ...

London on alert for terror attack ahead of Olympic Games - News.com.au

London is on alert ahead of the Olympics after reports of a planned terror attack following IOC president Jacques Rogge's decision not to hold commemorative ceremonies for victims of the 1972 Munich Games massacre. Source: Getty Images

ISRAEL fears an Iranian terror squad in Europe are planning to attack their athletes during the London Olympics, according to reports.

Agents from Israel’s elite intelligence organisation, Mossad, are hunting Iranian-backed terrorists in Europe, who are allegedly planning an “anniversary” attack 40 years after the Munich massacre, Britain's The Sunday Times reports.

The fears come as tensions rise over the International Olympic Committee refusal to commemorate the killing of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches by Palestinian terrorists on September 5, 1972.

In preparation for an Olympic terror assault, panic rooms for VIPs and spectators have been set up beneath London’s Olympic Stadium to protect them from being taken hostage or killed, according to The Sunday Times.

The paper also claims that if an attack occurred on the stadium, security forces would “invacuate” key people, rushing them to safety inside the attack zone.


An estimated 50,000 VIPs will attend the Games, including a reported 140 heads of state, 200 government ministers, 100 royals and 150 members of the International Olympic Committee.

A ring of steel has been set up to protect the Games, including snipers on the stadium roof and lighting towers and airborne radiation detecting equipment.

While M15 and Scotland Yard have reportedly raised the threat level against Israelis at the Games, Israel’s security squad Shin Bet has also been sent to protect the country’s 38 athletes living at the Athletes Village.

Concerns of an attack on Israel were heightened by the suicide bombing of a bus in Bulgaria last week, killing five Israeli tourists and the Bulgarian bus driver.

A man – carrying American travel documents – exploded a bomb on board the tourist coach just hours before an Israeli cargo plane carrying elite security teams landed nearby.

The blast was reportedly revenge for the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists, which Iran blames on Israel.
It confirmed intelligence Mossad had received that the Quds Force - Iran’s overseas hit squad – would use a suicide bomber disguised as a westerner.

The Israelis are now convinced the attack was a precursor to a bigger hit — with London’s Olympic Games as the suspected target, the paper claimed.

They allegedly believe Iran and Hezbollah, the militant Shi’ite Muslim group it arms and funds in Lebanon, plan to repeat the bloodshed of Black September.

The world watched in horror in 1972 when Palestinian terrorists scaled the fences of the Athletes Village in Munich and killed two Israeli athletes and took another nine hostage.

After German forces bungled an ambush at the military airport, the terrorists shot the athletes and threw a grenade into their helicopter to ensure they were dead.

A global campaign – backed by US president Barack Obama – has pushed for a minute of silence during London’s Opening Ceremony to honour the victims.

But IOC president Jacques Rogge rejected the proposals, saying that it was inappropriate to commemorate the deaths at the Olympics.

“We feel that the Opening Ceremony is an atmosphere that is not fit to remember such a tragic incident,” he told a press conference.

He added that some IOC delegates would attend a memorial on September 5 at the German military airport of Furstenfeldbruck where the killing took place.

“We are going to pay a homage to the athletes, of course, as we always have done in the past and will do in the future,” he said.
 


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