Olympics must go ahead next year as
symbol of overcoming COVID-19, Tokyo governor says
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[July 13, 2020]
By Linda Sieg and Ami Miyazaki
TOKYO (Reuters) - Tokyo Governor Yuriko
Koike, often floated as a future Japanese premier, said on Monday
the Olympics must go ahead next year as a symbol of world unity in
overcoming the novel coronavirus, even as her city grapples with
stubborn spikes in cases.
Japan has not seen an explosive coronavirus outbreak as suffered in
some other places but a recent increase in cases in Tokyo, which
accounts for more than a third of its more than 20,000 total, has
fanned worries about a second wave of infections.
The 2020 Olympics were scheduled to start this month but were
postponed because of the coronavirus. Koike has pledged to win
public support for the Games, although a media survey showed a
majority think they should be cancelled or postponed again.
"I want to host them as a symbol of the world coming together to
overcome this tough situation and of strengthened bonds among
humankind," Koike told Reuters in an online interview.
She declined to specify a deadline for deciding if the Games could
go ahead.
A media-savvy former television announcer who speaks English and
Arabic, Koike is to many a paradox: a global thinker with a
nationalist tinge; a political outsider who advanced with help from
old-boy mentors, and a risk-taker who shied away from the big gamble
of running for parliament in 2017 as head of her upstart "Party of
Hope".
The party floundered after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called a snap
election.
Instead, Koike stayed on as Tokyo governor and has won plaudits for
her straight-talking handling of the COVID-19 outbreak in contrast
to what critics called Abe's clumsy response.
She was re-elected by a landslide last week, reigniting talk she has
a shot at becoming Japan's first woman prime minister.
On Monday, she sought to brush such speculation aside.
"I'm happy that people have hopes for me but I received support for
a second term as governor," she said.
"I want to protect the lives and health of the people of Tokyo by
addressing the immediate issue of policies for the coronavirus. That
is my greatest mission."
POLITICAL MACHINE?
Tokyo's jump in COVID-19 cases comes as Abe's government prepares to
launch a campaign to promote domestic tourism, but that has raised
concern about spreading the virus outside the capital.
[to top of second column] |
Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike speaks at the opening ceremony of the
Ariake Arena, which was due to host volleyball and wheelchair
basketball competitions in the now-postponed 2020 Olympic Games in
Tokyo, Japan February 2, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Koike said it was important both to contain the virus and revive the
slumping economy.
"At present, a tough situation continues but ... by taking a proper
response in Tokyo, I want to advance both the prevention of
infections and social and economic activity," she said.
Tokyo accounts for about 20% of Japan's economy.
Koike, who clashed with Abe's administration over the timing of a
state of emergency, and over which businesses to target for
shutdowns, said she wanted greater clarity on local governments'
authority during the crisis.
A veteran member of parliament before defying Abe's Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) to make her 2016 bid for governor, Koike also
wants to make the metropolis a global financial centre by luring
foreign talent.
Still, speculation persists that she could yet aim for Japan's top
job.
She has already broken several glass ceilings: first female governor
of Tokyo, Japan's first female defence minister and the first woman
to run for LDP president.
But creating a new political machine to vault her to the top would
be tough, political analysts said.
"Does she have what it takes to be prime minister? Absolutely. But
she doesn't have the political machine that can make it happen,"
said a source who has advised Koike for years.
A return to the LDP fold would also face obstacles, given that
mutual antagonism runs deep.
(Reporting by Linda Sieg; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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