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London 2012 security not compromised, says Coe London 2012 security not compromised, says Coe
(40 minutes later)
Security for the Olympics has not been compromised by the failure of G4S to recruit enough security staff, London 2012 chairman Lord Coe has said.Security for the Olympics has not been compromised by the failure of G4S to recruit enough security staff, London 2012 chairman Lord Coe has said.
It emerged last Wednesday that 3,500 troops were being drafted in to plug gaps in security staff provision.It emerged last Wednesday that 3,500 troops were being drafted in to plug gaps in security staff provision.
"We will work very hard, we will remedy this - security will not be compromised," Lord Coe told BBC Radio 5 live."We will work very hard, we will remedy this - security will not be compromised," Lord Coe told BBC Radio 5 live.
"This is not about numbers, this is about the mix," he said."This is not about numbers, this is about the mix," he said.
G4S has said it stands to lose up to £50m after being unable to provide the 10,000 staff it had been contracted to deliver.G4S has said it stands to lose up to £50m after being unable to provide the 10,000 staff it had been contracted to deliver.
"The reality is - and I can't put it more simply than this - G4S expected people to materialise and when they didn't, as the home secretary has said, we moved very quickly to fill that gap," said Lord Coe. Lord Coe said 100 venues and more than 2,000 sessions of sport meant "this comes together in stages and when the rubber really hits the road, that's when plans collide with reality and that's the reality of security".
A "prudent and judicious plan" had been put in place, he said. He added: "I can't put it more simply than this, G4S expected people to materialise and when they didn't, as the home secretary has said, we moved very quickly to fill that gap."
A "prudent and judicious plan" had been put in place, he added.
He said people should not run away with the idea that "suddenly we haven't got G4S in place - we have".
"I'm in the Olympic Park every day - we've got 4,000 trained G4S personnel in the park and they've been there for some years and they've been doing a spectacularly good job."
On Saturday, G4S chief executive Nick Buckles told BBC News he only "began to know it was going wrong eight or nine days ago".On Saturday, G4S chief executive Nick Buckles told BBC News he only "began to know it was going wrong eight or nine days ago".
He said that, as large numbers were being interviewed, trained, licensed and accredited, "it is only when you get closer to the Games you realise that the number is not as high as you expect".He said that, as large numbers were being interviewed, trained, licensed and accredited, "it is only when you get closer to the Games you realise that the number is not as high as you expect".
Lord Coe said he would not comment on reports that ministers had known of problems earlier. Asked whether Mr Buckles should quit, Lord Coe said: "That is absolutely not for me to even speculate on."
And asked whether Mr Buckles should quit, he said: "That is absolutely not for me to even speculate on." Home Secretary Theresa May has said she was made aware of the scale of the problem at G4S only last Wednesday.
Earlier reports that security minister James Brokenshire attended daily senior level Olympics security meetings were incorrect, the Home Office said.
A spokesman said the meetings with department officials, G4S and organisers Locog - which have taken place for the past three weeks - were not focused on the wider G4S recruiting problems.