Japan committed to hosting Olympics on schedule but Xi visit delayed

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[March 05, 2020]  By Chris Gallagher and Kevin Buckland

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Olympics minister signaled on Thursday the Summer Games would go ahead as planned from July even as the coronavirus outbreak spread to new parts of the country.

The minister, Seiko Hashimoto made the comments on the same day that Japan reported its biggest one-day increase in new cases of coronavirus. Broadcaster NHK reported confirmed cases had risen to 1,036 nationwide as of Thursday morning, 36 more than the previous day.

And while plans for the Games to go ahead were unchanged, a state visit to Japan by Chinese President Xi Jinping was delayed following a decision by both Tokyo and Beijing.

The Olympics minister had stirred controversy earlier this week by saying the contract with the International Olympic Committee "could be interpreted as allowing a postponement" of the Games within calendar 2020.

"Based on the fact that the IOC never mentioned about cancelling or postponing the Tokyo Games at its meeting yesterday, I don't expect a cancellation notice or anything of that sort," Hashimoto told parliament.



Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said in a statement the metropolitan government was working in full collaboration with the IOC and organizers "to ensure the delivery of a safe and secure Games."

Japan's western prefecture of Shiga reported its first coronavirus infection on Thursday, a day after the announcement of a first case in the southern prefecture of Miyazaki.

National broadcaster NHK also reported new coronavirus infections in Kyoto, Sapporo and Niigata.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Japan and China would arrange a better time for Xi to visit as they have agreed to prioritize the fight against the coronavirus. The delay in Xi's visit, originally planned for early April, will not affect Japan-China relations, he told a news conference.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing the two countries would maintain close communication on the timing of Xi's visit, without elaborating.

Japan plans to impose two-week quarantines on Chinese and South Korean visitors, the Yomiuri newspaper reported.

RIPPLE EFFECTS

Twelve people have died from the disease in Japan, according to the health ministry.

The rapid spread of the virus has raised questions about whether Tokyo can host the Olympics as scheduled from July 24, with the effects being felt by other sporting events.

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Japan's Olympics Minister Seiko Hashimoto attends a news conference at Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's official residence in Tokyo, Japan September 11, 2019. REUTERS/Issei Kato

On Wednesday, the Japanese Rugby Football Union announced that next month's Asia Sevens Invitational, which doubles as a test event for rugby sevens at the Tokyo Olympics, has been canceled due to concerns over the coronavirus outbreak.

The Tokyo marathon was held this month without the participation of non-elite runners, and with fewer volunteers and spectators.

Hashimoto told the upper house on Thursday that the final decision on holding the Games as planned rested with the IOC.

"Cancellation or delay of the Games would be unacceptable for the athletes," Hashimoto said. "An environment where athletes can feel at ease and focus should be firmly prepared."

Under the host city contract, the IOC has the right to terminate the contract if it has reasonable grounds to believe the safety of the Games would be seriously threatened.

And organizers have made provisions to cancel Tokyo 2020 in the event of a massive earthquake or other natural disaster, Japan's Mainichi newspaper reported.

But IOC head Thomas Bach on Wednesday voiced confidence the Games would go ahead, saying organizers were receiving expert information from the World Health Organization and others and that the words "postponement" and "cancellation" had not been mentioned at the IOC's executive board meeting.

Some Tokyo residents thought differently.

"I think the Olympics should be canceled in this case because it is a dangerous situation," 77-year-old Yufumi Tamaki told Reuters on Thursday. "I feel sorry for the athletes and the people who have prepared for the Games, but it is more important to save lives."



(Reporting by Chris Gallagher and Kevin Buckland; Additional reporting by Sakura Murakami and Yu Takito; Editing by Lincoln Feast & Simon Cameron-Moore)

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