By Ami Miyazaki
TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japanese
non-profit sports institute paid $1.3 million by the Tokyo
Olympic bid committee during a campaign to secure the 2020 Games
shut down all its activities at the end of December, according
to a notice on its website.
The Jigoro Kano Memorial International Sport Institute,
established in 2009 and run by former Japanese prime minister
Yoshiro Mori, did not provide a reason for ceasing activities on
its website.
Reuters was not immediately able to reach a representative of
the non-profit by telephone or email.
Mori did not respond to a Reuters request for comment when
contacted by email through the Tokyo organising committee.
The Tokyo metropolitan government, which has a seat on the
institute's board, said it had not been notified of the
non-profit's closure nor any changes in the group's activities.
The Tokyo bid committee paid the institute $1.3 million between
2012 and 2014, when Tokyo was lobbying to win the 2020 Games,
Reuters reported last year.
A staff member at the institute told Reuters last year the money
was used to hire a U.S.-based consulting firm and two individual
consultants to support the Tokyo 2020 bid.
Mori, a powerful figure in Japanese sports who now heads the
Tokyo Olympics organising committee, said in November he was not
directly involved in the non-profit's finances and said he did
not know about the money the institute received from the bid.
"It's true that I am the president of that organisation, but I
wasn't directly involved in the handling of the finances," Mori
said during a news conference last year.
French investigators have examined banking records and
transactions by the Tokyo bid committee as part of an ongoing
investigation into whether $2.3 million paid to a Singapore
consultant was a bribe to win support from a key member of the
International Olympic Committee for Japan.
(Reporting by Ami Miyazaki and Mari Saito; Editing by Michael
Perry)
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