Tokyo Games to decide COVID-19 'counter-measures' by end of year: IOC's
Coates
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[September 15, 2020]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Organisers
are ploughing ahead with the postponed Tokyo Olympics and will
decide by the end of the year what "counter-measures" are required
to hold them safely in the time of COVID-19, IOC Vice President John
Coates said on Tuesday.
Australian Coates heads up the International Olympic Committee's
(IOC) Coordination Commission for the Tokyo Games, which were
delayed until 2021 because of the pandemic.
Coates told reporters in Sydney that organisers were "throwing
whatever resources are necessary" at the Games.
"Our decision at the moment is to go ahead," Coates said at an event
marking the 20th anniversary of the 2000 Sydney Olympics' opening
ceremony.
"What we wait for is to decide what counter-measures we need to go
ahead with, to proceed depending on what stage COVID is at.
"The extent of the ceremonies, the extent of the crowd
participation, any necessary quarantine when they arrive in Japan.
All of those things.
"And by the time we get to the end of the year we'll make an
assessment on what counter-measures we'll need to apply."
The Japanese government and the IOC took the unprecedented decision
in March to postpone the Games, which were originally scheduled to
begin in July.
Tokyo officials have said they intend to put on the Games in 2021
even if the pandemic has not eased substantially.
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International Olympic Committee (IOC) Vice President John Coates (L)
attends a news conference in Tokyo, Japan December 13, 2017.
REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Australia's retired five-time Olympic champion swimmer Ian Thorpe
said he wanted to see the Games go ahead but was doubtful they could
without a vaccine.
"First and foremost is people's health," Thorpe told reporters at
the Sydney Games ceremony.
"So let's put that into perspective and if we haven't got a
treatment or a vaccine for COVID, the Olympics will possibly not go
ahead."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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