Vaccines 'encouraged' but not compulsory for athletes at Tokyo: Coates
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[February 25, 2021]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Athletes are
being encouraged to get vaccinated against COVID-19 ahead of the
Tokyo Olympics but it will not be compulsory, IOC Vice President
John Coates said on Thursday.
"Not compulsory, we can't do that," Coates, head of the IOC's
Coordination Commission for the Tokyo Games, told reporters in
Brisbane.
"But it is certainly being encouraged and the IOC has an agreement
with COVAX where it's helping to facilitate the distribution of
vaccines."
COVAX is the World Health Organisation's global vaccine-sharing
scheme.
IOC President Thomas Bach said last month it was up to national
Olympic committees to coordinate with their governments over access
to vaccines but he was not in favour of athletes "jumping the
queue".
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With the delayed Games set to begin on July 23, Coates, who is also
president of the Australian Olympic Committee, expected the
country's athletes to be vaccinated by June at "the latest".
Australia began its vaccine roll-out this week.
Coates also said Japan's government was expected to make a decision
on how many fans could attend the Olympics by April.
Organisers hope to have spectators at the Games though
speculation remains that the event might be cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
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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
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"A decision on all of the accredited people and all of those who
have bought tickets in Japan will certainly be there," he said.
"A final decision will be taken by the Japanese government, it's
governments that decide these things on what's safe and, a bit
later, probably March, April ... a decision on what venue capacity
we are going to have."
Coates said officials had to make the Athletes Village and venues
"the safest place in Tokyo".
"Last week we had four days of operational planning, we are down now
to looking at the seating on the buses to make sure there's the
correct distancing," he said.
"Well that's all very well, we suddenly need double the fleet of
buses and there's a lot of buses involved."
(Additional reporting by Stefica Nicol Bikes; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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