Exclusive: Tokyo has no 'Plan B'
for Games despite coronavirus
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[February 28, 2020]
By Ami Miyazaki
TOKYO (Reuters) - Tokyo has no Plan B
for this year's Summer Olympics despite alarm over the spread of the
coronavirus in Japan and elsewhere with under five months before the
event, a senior official said on Friday.
"There will not be one bit of change in holding the Games as
planned," Katsura Enyo, deputy director general of the Tokyo 2020
Preparation Bureau at the city government, told Reuters.
Having prepared for years and invested some $12 billion, Japan is
eager to quell fears the Games might be called off, postponed or
moved to a different location due to the virus.
Though on the decline in China where it originated, the flu-like
disease is moving fast around the world, including more than 200
cases and five deaths in Japan.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) president and former fencing
champion Thomas Bach bolstered Tokyo's stance on Thursday, saying
his organization was "fully committed" to holding the Olympics on
schedule.
In a telephone interview, Enyo said organizers were "facing up to"
the coronavirus - but it would not derail the July 24-Aug. 9 event.
"We are not even thinking of when or in what contingency we might
decide things. There is no thought of change at all in my mind," she
said.
POSTPONEMENT?
Some Japanese media have reported organizers were considering
postponing the Games for six months to a year, but Enyo denied that.
"No such debate is going on," she said, adding that preparations
were on track.
Japan is, however, considering scaling back the Olympic torch relay
due to the coronavirus threat.
And despite its optimism over the Olympics, Japan has canceled
numerous sporting events.
Tokyo's Yomiuri Giants will play two pre-season baseball games in an
empty stadium, while the Tokyo Marathon will take place on Sunday
with elite runners only.
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A man wearing a protective face mask, following an outbreak of the
coronavirus, walks past an advertising billboard of Tokyo Olympics
2020, near the Shinjuku station in Tokyo, Japan, February 27, 2020.
REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo
The country has also had more than 700 coronavirus cases and four
other deaths on a cruise liner quarantined off Yokohama.
Japan has built a raft of new facilities for the Games, including a
156.9 billion yen ($1.42 billion) National Stadium, and hoped for a
huge boost in tourism, which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made a
cornerstone of his economic plan.
But markets have begun pricing in the risk of a canceled Olympics,
with the Dentsu Group ad agency's share price hammered as investors
fret about its high exposure.
The quadrennial sporting showpiece was last called off due to World
War Two but doubts about Tokyo have grown since Organizing Committee
chief executive Toshiro Muto said he was "seriously concerned" the
virus would pour "cold water" on their momentum.
However, a London mayoral candidate's suggestion that the British
capital - which hosted the 2012 Summer Olympics - could take them
again if needed drew sharp responses from Japan.
And in its latest statement on the issue, the IOC said preparations
for Tokyo 2020 "continue as planned" and it had "full confidence" in
authorities to take all necessary measures.
(Reporting by Ami Miyazaki; Additional reporting by Karolos Grohmann
in Athens; Writing by Elaine Lies; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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