Olympics: No spectators at Tokyo
2020 Games torch lighting ceremony - organizers
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[March 09, 2020]
By Karolos Grohmann
ATHENS (Reuters) - The Tokyo 2020
Olympics torch lighting ceremony in ancient Olympia will be the
first in more 35 years to be held without spectators after
organizers on Monday introduced tighter measures to protect against
the coronavirus.
Greece's Olympic Committee said spectators would be excluded from
both the dress rehearsal at the ancient site on Wednesday and the
widely broadcast ceremony on Thursday.
This is the first time since the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics that the
ceremony will be held without any spectators lounging on the grassy
slopes of the ancient stadium in the tiny Peloponesian hamlet. The
ceremony -- held both for summer and winter Games -- usually
attracts several thousand spectators, including Greeks and foreign
visitors.
"The lighting ceremony of the Olympic flame will be done without the
presence of spectators and only 100 invited and accredited guests,"
the Greek Olympic Committee said in a statement.
"The dress rehearsal on March 11 will be closed to spectators and
media."
The Olympic torch will be lit in Olympia at a scaled-down ceremony
on March 12 before a seven-day relay that culminates with a handover
ceremony in Greece on March 19.
The number of people inside the ancient stadium will also be reduced
with only a few dozen representatives of the Tokyo Games from a
group of about 150 allowed access to the ceremony.
Organizers will also shut the press center following the ceremony to
avoid the gathering of many people in an indoor area and will stage
Wednesday's dress rehearsal without the presence of media. Tokyo had
already stopped 340 children from attending.
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A general view of the Olympic flame lighting ceremony for the Rio
2016 Olympic Games inside the ancient Olympic Stadium on the site of
ancient Olympia, Greece, April 21, 2016. REUTERS/Valerie Gache/File
Photo
Greece on Sunday announced a two-week ban on sporting events with
spectators and on school field trips, as its number of coronavirus
cases rose by seven to 73. The prefecture of Ilia, of which Olympia
is part, is among areas of the country hardest hit by the
coronavirus.
The Mayor of Olympia has written to International Olympic Committee
President Thomas Bach, proposing the postponement of the ceremony
until May.
"The danger of staging the torch lighting with only a handful of
spectators, limited number of officials and delegations, and under a
cloud of fear and concern will damage the greatness and prestige of
this event," Olympia mayor Giorgos Georgiopoulos said in his letter.
"With a sense of responsibility, the municipal authority, all
parties of the city council of Ancient Olympia, in order to secure
the global radiance of the event asks the IOC which has the
exclusive responsibility of organizing it to consider the
possibility of moving the torch lighting ceremony to May of this
year."
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Ed Osmond)
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