Security firm G4S on Thursday defended a multimillion pound management fee for protecting Britain's Olympic venues after politicians urged it to waive the payment following its failure to provide enough guards.
Lawmakers had expressed astonishment that G4S planned to retain the 57 million pound management fee despite a debacle over Olympic security that forced Britain to draft in an extra 3,500 troops to make up the shortfall.
The world's largest security firm said it wished to "clarify" the nature of the fee, which members of parliament's influential Home Affairs Committee had questioned at a hearing with G4S's Chief Executive Nick Buckles this week.
"This constitutes payments in respect of the operating cost elements of the contract relating to the infrastructure needed to support the contract over the last two years," G4S said in a statement.
G4S has been at the centre of a political fire storm that has pummelled its share price since it announced only two weeks before the start of the Games that it could not provide a promised 10,400 security guards under a 284 million pound contract.
On Thursday the government said it was putting an extra 1,200 troops on standby as a contingency in case G4S failed to meet its revised total of 7,000 guards.
The company has promised to reimburse British authorities for the extra soldiers and police required to cover security gaps at Olympic venues.
The firm said it had conducted a review and concluded that even if all of the additional troops on standby were deployed, the overall losses on its contract would remain within its previously stated estimate of between £35 million and £50 million.
Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images
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