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Sochi Olympic flame lit in Greece

ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece – Using the sun’s rays, the Olympic flame lighting for the Winter Games in Sochi went off without a hitch in southern Greece Sunday, ahead of its journey across Russia’s nine time zones and even a trip to space before the Feb. 7-23 games.

The ceremony was held with actresses dressed as ancient priestesses at the birthplace of the Greek games held in antiquity, with the flame lighting using a parabolic mirror.

Actress Ino Menegaki, in the role of high priestess, called out to the ancient god of the sun, Apollo, before the flame was lit and passed to 18-year-old Greek alpine skier Ioannis Antoniou. NHL star Alex Ovechkin will be the first Russian involved in the torch relay.

Newly elected International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach was present at the 20-minute ancient re-enactment, involving 21 priestesses dressed in cream-colored pleated dresses.

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“The Olympic Games … should inspire the people of the world and especially the political authorities by showing them that quarrels and conflicts can be addressed with peaceful means,” Bach said. “I think it will have a very positive effect on Russia. It will show a new Russia to the world and also open up civil society.”

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Some 2,800 athletes from more than 80 countries are due to compete at Sochi.

Actress Ino Menegaki as high priestess, holds a torch after the Olympic Flame was lit from the sun’s rays, during the final dress rehearsal for the lighting of the Olympic flame at Ancient Olympia, in west southern Greece on Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013. The flame will be transported by torch relay to the Russian resort of Sochi, which will host the Feb. 7-23, 2014 Winter Olympics. AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis

The Russian leg of the torch relay is set to cover 65,000 kilometres (40,390 miles) before the Winter Games, carrying the torch by hot-air balloon, dog sled and a nuclear-powered ice breaker before its scheduled trip to space on Nov. 7.

READ MORE: Russian offers ‘assurances’ over gays ahead of Sochi Games

Sochi organizers promised the torch route would be within an hour’s travel of an estimated 90 per cent of Russia’s population.

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“There is no greater privilege than to stand here in the spiritual home of the Olympic Movement,” said Dmitry Chernyshenko, chief organizer of Sochi 2014.

“This is the beginning of an epic journey for the Olympic Torch, a journey that will change Russia forever.”

The weekend ceremony was overshadowed by the arrest in Athens of the leadership of the country’s far-right Golden Dawn party on charges of forming a criminal organization.

The Greek leg of the relay will cover roughly 2,000 kilometres (around 1,250 miles) until an Oct. 7 handover ceremony in the Panathenian Stadium in Athens, venue of the first modern Olympics in 1896.

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