Olympics-Up to 10,000 fans allowed at Tokyo 2020 venues, despite
warnings
Send a link to a friend
[June 21, 2021]
By Chris Gallagher, Antoni Slodkowski and Daniel Leussink
TOKYO (Reuters) -Up to 10,000 domestic
spectators will be allowed in Tokyo 2020 venues, Olympics organisers
said on Monday, a decision that cuts against the recommendation of
medical experts who said holding the event without fans was the
least risky option.
The announcement ends months of speculation and highlights Japan's
determination to push on with the Games and salvage the
multi-billion-dollar extravaganza amid public opposition and deep
concern about a resurgence in infections https://tmsnrt.rs/2RDKuP7.
The decision was widely expected after some recent comments by
organisers and as the government's own medical experts last week
appeared resigned to the event going ahead with fans.
Japan has largely avoided the kind of explosive coronavirus
outbreaks that have devastated other countries, but the vaccine
roll-out was initially slow and the medical system pushed to the
brink in some places.
The limit for the Games, scheduled to begin on July 23, "will be set
at 50% of venue capacity, up to a maximum of 10,000 people",
organisers said in a statement.
But the cheering - for a victory or a plucky underdog - will likely
be quelled as shouting will be prohibited. Organisers also said
masks would be required and spectators be requested to travel
directly to venues and go straight home.
Numbers could be further reduced after July 12, depending on whether
"quasi emergency" COVID-19 measures, due to expire the day before,
are extended or due to any other anti-infection measures in force at
the time, according to organisers.
Spectators from overseas have already been banned. The national
stadium, built for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and due to host athletics
and soccer this time, would have held 68,000 fans but now will be at
a sliver of that.
However, TV deals, such as that with NBCUniversal for 17 nights of
U.S. primetime coverage, will ensure the Games are beamed around the
world.
Organisers are still considering whether to allow alcohol to be
served in venues, Tokyo 2020 President Seiko Hashimoto said. Even as
experts voiced concern, Hashimoto had previously said she was eyeing
allowing up to 10,000 fans.
Some of the country's top health experts on Friday said banning
spectators would be the least risky option.
"It would be preferable to have no audience from the standpoint of
infectious disease control," Haruka Sakamoto, a physician and
researcher at Keio University, told Reuters before the decision.
"I am concerned not just about the increase in the number of people
coming to watch the Olympics itself but also about the loosening of
people's sense of urgency by hosting the Olympics with spectators."
Some 65% of the public want the event postponed again or cancelled,
a poll by broadcaster Asahi News Network found. Nearly 70% said they
thought the Games would not be held safely and securely, the poll
showed.
[to top of second column]
|
Athletics - Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
Test Event - Athletics - Olympic Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - May 9, 2021
General view inside the stadium REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
REVENUE SLASHED
Ticket revenues are likely to be reduced by more than half from an
earlier expected 90 billion yen ($817.14 million), Tokyo 2020 CEO
Toshiro Muto told a briefing.
He said he wanted to discuss with the Tokyo and national governments
on how to cover the shortfall.
Initially organisers sold some 4.48 million tickets and the
government had expected a windfall for tourism. Some 840,000 tickets
have since been refunded, but the caps mean another decrease,
bringing the total number down to 2.72 million tickets, Muto said.
Capping the number of fans at both the Olympics and Paralympics
would reduce the expected positive economic impact from the Games by
about 5% according to Nomura Research Institute's Takahide Kiuchi.
The announcement followed five-way talks among Tokyo 2020 organisers,
the Japanese government and that of the capital, Tokyo, and the
international Olympic and Paralympic committees.
Before the meeting, IOC President Thomas Bach said the vaccination
rate for athletes and officials residing in the Olympic village was
now "well above 80%", exceeding the IOC's initial expectations.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has said he would not rule out holding
the Summer Olympics without spectators if the capital was under a
state of emergency for COVID-19.
"In the event a state of emergency was declared then we can't rule
out not having spectators," he told reporters during a tour of
vaccination sites in Tokyo on Monday.
Last week, Suga decided to lift a coronavirus state of emergency for
Tokyo and eight other prefectures that had suffered a resurgence.
The government retained less tough curbs for seven of the nine
prefectures, including Tokyo, until July 11, less than two weeks
before the Games are set to open.
($1 = 110.1400 yen)
(Reporting by Chris Gallagher, Antoni Slodkowski, Chang-Ran Kim,
Daniel Leussink, Rocky Swift and Atsuko Aoyama; Editing by Lincoln
Feast, David Dolan and Alison Williams)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|