ATHENS, Greece - Greece's Olympic Committee said Thursday that work to replant fire-ravaged woods at the birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games was far behind schedule, and urged "drastic improvement" before the flame-lighting ceremony for the Beijing Olympics.
The conservative government has pledged to replant the area around the site, following the descriptions of ancient writers, in time for the March 24 ceremony.
But the Hellenic Olympic Committee, or HOC, said work was badly delayed.
"If the current situation does not improve drastically in the immediate future, our country will be brought into international disrepute and one of the Olympic movement's top events will be dramatically discredited," an HOC statement said.
"We express our deepest concern at the progress of the work at the site, given the very tight time schedule."
Officials at the Culture Ministry, which is responsible for replanting at the World Heritage site, were not immediately available for comment.
Ancient Olympia, in the western Peloponnese, a lush beauty spot where the ancient Games were first held in 778 B.C, suffered extensive damage from the summer wildfires - the worst on record - that killed 66 people in southern Greece.
Firefighters kept the flames at bay just short of the 2,500-year-old ruined temples and stadium, but the surrounding forests were obliterated.
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