Olympics-'We cannot postpone again,' Tokyo 2020 boss says of COVID gloom
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[June 03, 2021]
By Rocky Swift
TOKYO (Reuters) -The head of Japan's
Olympics organising committee ruled out on Thursday another
suspension of the Games, despite deep disquiet at the prospect of
thousands of athletes and officials arriving during a fourth wave of
COVID-19 infections.
Already postponed from last year at the cost of an extra $3.5
billion, a scaled-down version of the Games, with no foreign
spectators, is set to start on July 23.
But with a slow vaccine rollout, Tokyo and nine other regions under
a state of emergency, and rising numbers of severe coronavirus
cases, most Japanese oppose hosting the Olympics.
Most of the capital's city council, the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly,
agree, the Tokyo Shimbun paper reported on Thursday.
Illustrating the public anxiety, residents in one training venue,
Ota City, were furious over a decision to give preferential
vaccinations to staff attending to visiting Australian softball
players, media also said.
However, organising committee president Seiko Hashimoto countered
the gloom, telling the Nikkan Sports newspaper: "We cannot postpone
again."
Hashimoto, who competed in seven summer and winter Olympics as a
cyclist and skater, also told the BBC that while Japanese were
understandably worried, they should be reassured that a "bubble
situation" was being carefully constructed.
"I believe that the possibility of these Games going on is 100% that
we will do this," she added. "One thing the organising committee
commits and promises to all the athletes out there is that we will
defend and protect their health."
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga also appeared confident of pulling off
a successful Olympics and Paralympics as he plans a snap vote
afterwards, the Asahi newspaper said.
NO HIGH-FIVES
Authorities have not decided whether Japanese spectators will be
allowed to attend Olympics events. There are fears that shouting,
hugging and high-fiving could promote contagion.
In the latest upsets in the run-up to the Olympics, Kurume City
pulled out of hosting Kenya's training camp, while a player on
Ghana's Under-24 team tested positive after arriving for a friendly
match.
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Seiko Hashimoto, President of the Tokyo
2020 Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games,
speaks during her visits at Tsukiji Depot, Tokyo, Japan May 25,
2021. Koji Sasahara/Pool via REUTERS
Taiwan's baseball team, which is
ranked fourth in the world, pulled out of the final qualifying
tournament for the Olympics as it could not find anywhere safe to
practice at home and was worried about health risks at the event in
Mexico.
Even so, Taiwan still hopes its athletes will have a chance to
compete, Foreign Minister Joseph Wu told reporters, saying efforts
by Japan and international Olympic officials to put on the event
were highly appreciated.
Though avoiding the rates of some other nations, serious cases of
COVID-19 are rising in Japan, where the infection tally stands at
nearly 750,000, with more than 13,000 deaths.
The nation's most senior medical adviser said on Thursday that
public health guidance, including his, was not reaching the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) in charge of the event.
"We are now considering where we should give our advice," Shigeru
Omi told lawmakers. "If they want to hold (the Games), it's our job
to tell them what the risks are."
Though Olympic advertisements are sprinkled around Tokyo, it is a
far cry from the usual glitz and buzz, with many sponsors unsure how
to proceed with events. Thousands of volunteers have quit also,
public broadcaster NHK said this week.
Hashimoto acknowledged the sadness of having no outside spectators
at an event that is normally an enormous global party.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that they (athletes) can
compete in the Games," she said in the BBC interview.
"To not be able to have family members and friends who have
supported them all along must be a very painful thing and that has
caused me pain too."
(Reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto, Chang-Ran Kim and Rocky Swift in
Tokyo, Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing
by Simon Cameron-Moore and Clarence Fernandez)
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