Tokyo Olympics at risk if
coronavirus mutates, gets stronger: Japan adviser
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[July 15, 2020]
By Linda Sieg and Rocky Swift
TOKYO (Reuters) - The Tokyo Olympics
may have to be postponed again if the novel coronavirus mutates into
a stronger pathogen, Kiyoshi Kurokawa, a prominent Japanese
government adviser, said on Wednesday.
However, a recent spike in cases in Tokyo is due to a failure to
stick to guidelines to prevent contagion, he said.
A physician who served as a science adviser to the Japanese cabinet
from 2006-2008, Kurokawa also headed an independent probe into the
2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. Currently, he is advising the
government on the coronavirus pandemic.
"I think the virus is mutating all the time ... it may be a much
stronger virus that triggers a second wave," Kurokawa told Reuters.
"The Olympics may be postponed again, but I can't predict."
"I think it's small incidents happening in Tokyo ... new cases are
because people are not abiding by recommendations," Kurokawa said of
the current spike in infections. "But if there are some mutations,
that is a completely different story. That could happen anywhere in
the world."
Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike told Reuters on Monday the Olympics,
originally scheduled to start this month but put off to 2021 because
of the pandemic, must go ahead next year as a symbol of world unity
in overcoming coronavirus.
The spike in infections in Tokyo, which accounts for more than
one-third of Japan's more than 23,000 cases, has prompted a backlash
against a planned campaign to promote domestic tourism. Kurokawa
said authorities were trying to balance priorities.
"I think one of the concerns of this pandemic is how to prevent the
spreading out of this corona infection. The other side of this issue
is ... how to promote the economy. Many people are losing their
jobs," he said.
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Kiyoshi Kurokawa, the head of a new panel advising the Japanese
government on the coronavirus, looks at the monitor of his laptop
during a news conference in Tokyo July 5, 2012. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo
He added that he thought the government was "carefully balancing"
the two priorities.
Kurokawa was appointed last month to head a new panel to examine how
to use artificial intelligence to fight the spread of the virus. His
appointment to the four-person group including a Nobel Prize winning
geneticist came after Economics Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura
abruptly announced he would dissolve a panel of scientific experts
and remake it with new members.
The move came amid reports of clashes between the health experts and
politicians.
Kurokawa said that whatever experts recommended based on science,
political leaders had to make the final policy call.
"The scientific community's recommendations have to be fact-based,
science-based recommendations, but politicians have to make the
decisions," he said. "Scientists give advice, but decision-making is
not by scientists."
(Reporting by Linda Sieg and Rocky Swift; Writing by Linda Sieg;
Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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