Australia aiming to vaccinate athletes before Tokyo Games
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[January 28, 2021]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia
aims to vaccinate its Olympians against COVID-19 before they head to
the Tokyo Games, federal sport minister Richard Colbeck has said.
Advice from the body coordinating the vaccination rollout plan
suggested that athletes would likely be inoculated before the July
23-Aug. 8 Games, Colbeck said in comments published by the Canberra
Times on Thursday.
"If our plans work OK it may very well be conceivable that Olympic
athletes, for example, we'll get to them before they head off to the
Games anyway," he was quoted as saying.
Colbeck later issued a statement saying that "older Australians,
frontline workers and those with underlying medical conditions"
would be prioritised and that "most athletes" would be vaccinated in
a later phase of the rollout.
A number of national Olympic committees are planning to vaccinate
their athletes before the Games.
Israel's Olympic Committee said it had already vaccinated half its
Olympic delegation and would complete the process by the end of May.
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South Korea's Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said, "Of course the
athletes should be given the vaccine if they are going to
participate," when asked in an interview with Reuters on Thursday.
South Korea has said it will decide whether to vaccinate the 157
athletes signed up so far when Japan comes to a formal decision to
go ahead with the Games.
The International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said on
Wednesday the governing body was not in favour of athletes "jumping
the queue" for COVID-19 vaccines.
The Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) said it hoped athletes could
be vaccinated but said vulnerable people and health workers must
come first.
"We are recommending and encouraging our athletes to get vaccinated
but support the IOC position that it’s not mandatory," an AOC
spokesman said.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom and Hyonhee Shin in Seoul; Editing by Toby
Davis,Edwina Gibbs, Peter Rutherford)
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