IOC's Bach confident of sporting success in Tokyo despite pandemic
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[July 14, 2021]
TOKYO (Reuters) - The postponed
Tokyo Olympic Games will create new "stars and legends" despite a
one-year delay, fragmented preparations and the absence of fans in
the stadiums, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach
said on Wednesday.
Postponed last year due to COVID-19 pandemic, the Games get under
way next week, with all spectators banned from the venues of the 33
sports.
"These Games will have high sporting value under the circumstances,"
Bach told an online media roundtable. "We have seen how the athletes
persevered and adapted over more than one year...
"This challenge was the same for all of them. There we will
nevertheless see great sport and like in any Olympics new stars will
be born there, and new legends will be created."
As cases rose, the government declared a new state of emergency for
Tokyo and surrounding prefectures last week and Olympics organisers
announced no fans would be allowed at events in those areas.
Several big names will also be missing either through failure to
qualify, doping cases, or other reasons including an unwillingness
to travel to Tokyo because of the virus.
The Olympics have lost much public support in Japan because of fears
they will trigger a surge on infections.
Bach said he was supporting the strict measures imposed on the Games
and its participants, which were necessary to help persuade the
Japanese population that the Games would not become a superspreader
event.
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International Olympic Committee
President Thomas Bach speaks after a meeting with Japanese Prime
Minister Yoshihide Suga, in Tokyo, Japan, July 14, 2021. Kimimasa
Mayama/Pool via REUTERS
"We are trying to address the
concerns," he said.
"We always knew there was scepticism among the population and that
there are very special circumstances about which the population is
concerned and which transferred to the Olympic Games."
He said a high vaccination rate among participants, an Olympic
bubble with limited mobility for athletes and other stakeholders,
banning spectators, and continuous testing were part of the
organisers' plans to minimise any risk.
"This message has to get across. The Japanese people have to gain
confidence in this," he said.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; editing by John Stonestreet)
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