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An overhead camera that fell from wires suspending it over Olympic Park lays on the ground at the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Monday. Photo: AP

Seven hurt as giant TV ‘spidercam’ crashes to the ground at Olympic Park

Up to seven people were injured when a giant television camera suspended by cables plummeted to the ground in the Rio Olympic Park on Monday, a spokesperson said.

Up to seven people were injured when a giant television camera suspended by cables plummeted to the ground in the Rio Olympic Park on Monday, a spokesperson said.

The black camera, known as a ‘spidercam’ and used to take aerial shots of the park, came crashing down just outside the basketball stadium early in the afternoon.

An amateur video clip showed the camera, the size of a small motorbike, falling from a great height as people milled in the precinct below.

More footage showed two shocked-looking women sitting on the ground bleeding, one from the nose while the other has blood on her arm.

WATCH: Olympic Park ‘spidercam’ crashes to the ground

Another video showed a girl being taken into an ambulance on a stretcher carrying a balloon and an Olympic mascot.

“Olympic Broadcasting Services [OBS] had realised that the weight of the camera was too much so they started to isolate the area before it fell,” a spokesperson for the Rio organisers said.

“They thought the wire could hold for a little bit more. [But] the camera fell and hit one of the fences that was isolating the area.

“The camera and the fence hit two women. We’re still working to get all the information but we think seven people were injured. They are not serious,” the spokesperson added.

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One fan said there were scenes of confusion after the incident.

“I heard a noise, and at first I saw the cable on the ground, and I didn’t understand what happened,” said Natalia, without giving a surname.

“But I sat under the bridge and I heard a lot of noise, commotion, fire engines arriving and when I came over to this side I was told that a camera had fallen and I saw some women in the emergency vehicles.”

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A spokesperson for the OBS said the incident happened when a “pulling rope” used to guide the camera came down.

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“At that time the camera was at the height of 10 meters above the concourse, supported by the two independent guide ropes, each one of which could carry the full load of the camera,” said the spokesperson.

“Immediately OBS requested a cherry picker to arrive at the area to access the camera. A few minutes later, both ropes simultaneously broke.

“This resulted in the camera falling from a height of 20 meters onto a lower concourse.

It was the latest in a number of high-profile incidents to have raised fears about safety at the Games.

Two stray bullets hit the equestrian venue and a media bus had windows shattered, causing light injuries, in an attack which was blamed on stone-throwing youths.

Infrastructure problems have also caused a headache, most notably when the starting platform for the marathon swimming was swept away by strong currents and washed up on Copacabana beach.

Argentine tennis player Juan Martin del Potro also spent 40 minutes stuck in a lift in the athletes’ village when it came to a grinding halt after a power outage.

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