| 
		Tokyo Olympic torch relay stirs mixed emotions ahead of its Fukushima 
		start
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			 [March 24, 2021] 
			By Kiyoshi Takenaka, Ju-min Park and Elaine Lies 
 FUKUSHIMA/TOKYO (Reuters) - When 
			Shusaku Sagi was 19, he watched his soccer training centre at 
			J-Village in Fukushima morph into a base for workers decommissioning 
			the nuclear power plant nearby after the 2011 earthquake crippled it 
			and caused thousands to flee.
 
 On Thursday, the sports complex will house the starting ceremony for 
			the Olympic torch relay, kicking off a countdown to the Games in 
			Tokyo - the first ever organised during a deadly pandemic.
 
 "Big sports events like the Olympics can energize people and send a 
			message to the world to not forget Fukushima," said Sagi, now 29, 
			who organises youth soccer tournaments at J-Village.
 
 Members of the Japanese national women's soccer team will use the 
			Olympic flame, flown in from Greece, to light the torch. But the 
			ceremony - originally planned for thousands of fans as a celebration 
			of Japan's recovery - will be closed to the public.
 
		
		 
 The first section of the relay will not have spectators, and as some 
			10,000 runners take the torch across Japan's 47 prefectures, 
			including far-flung islands, onlookers must wear masks and socially 
			distance.
 
 The four-month event has been hit by several high-profile runner 
			cancellations as celebrities have pulled out, citing late notice and 
			worries about drawing crowds during the pandemic.
 
 Hiromi Kawamura, who oversees the relay, said organisers have had 
			"some crazy days" juggling fast-changing information, a shifting 
			pandemic situation and negotiations with national and local 
			governments.
 
 "We're asking people not to stand shoulder-to-shoulder. If it gets 
			really crowded... if we feel the situation is dangerous, we'll 
			suspend the relay. Then we'll start it again after we've made the 
			area safe," Kawamura said.
 
 Japan has fared better than most countries, with fewer than 9,000 
			coronavirus deaths. But a third wave of infections has pushed the 
			numbers to record highs, triggering a state of emergency in Tokyo 
			and other areas that was lifted this week.
 
 The majority of the public are against the Olympics being held as 
			scheduled, polls show.
 
 'LEFT OUT'
 
 After the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, the government enforced a 
			20-kilometre (12.4 miles) no-go zone around the plant and turned the 
			J-Village into a staging centre for thousands of nuclear cleanup 
			workers to don protective gear.
 
 
		
		 
			"Seeing my childhood playground turn into a base for decommissioning 
			work - even though it played an important function - made me sad 
			because I thought it would never be able to come back to what it 
			used to be," said J-Village's Sagi.
 
 The Fukushima native trained there from age 8 until he graduated 
			from high school.
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            High school students play 
			soccer game in front of a soccer training facility where torch relay 
			of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games is set to begin at the J-Village 
			training center in Naraha, Fukushima prefecture, Japan, March 23, 
			2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon 
            
			 
            Over time, the nuclear workers left. The rebuilding of J-Village 
			began in 2014; two years later, Sagi, who now organises youth soccer 
			tournaments at the complex, was tasked with measuring radiation 
			levels.
 The start of the relay at the venue is meant to highlight the 
			"Reconstruction Olympics" theme - lauding Japan's nearly $300 
			billion effort to revive the region.
 
 But some residents do not share Sagi's enthusiasm and chafe at the 
			government's efforts to showcase Fukushima.
 
 Vast areas around the plant remain off-limits, worries about 
			radiation linger and many who left have settled elsewhere. 
			Decommissioning will take up to a century and cost billions of 
			dollars.
 
 Takayuki Yanai, who works at a fisheries cooperative in Iwaki, 50km 
			south of the plant, said the concept of "Reconstruction Olympics" 
			was not widely shared by the locals.
 
 "Coastal fishing catch off Fukushima is still about 20% of what it 
			used to be," Yanai said. "I'm afraid we are sort of left out of the 
			reconstruction."
 
 'OUR RESPONSIBILITY'
 
 Still, members of the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee remained 
			confident that the event would be a success despite news on 
			Wednesday that another torch bearer was dropping out.
 
 Homare Sawa, who led Japan's women's football team to victory at the 
			FIFA World Cup four months after the 2011 earthquake, withdrew from 
			the torch relay, citing health reasons.
 
 
            
			 
			Figure skater and Olympic medallist Shoma Uno, as well as two 
			high-profile actresses, also pulled out on Wednesday.
 
 But Tokyo 2020 said that organisers were well prepared to host the 
			relay.
 
 "I'm certain we can hold an Olympics that will be safe and secure 
			for both the participants and the public," Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro 
			Muto said at a news conference on Wednesday.
 
 Norio Sasaki, who coached the women's football team that won in 
			2011, shared Muto's sentiment.
 
 "If anything, it is our responsibility as the host nation to 
			showcase the power of sport now," he said at the news conference.
 
 (Reporting by Ju-min Park, Kiyoshi Takenaka, Elaine Lies and Chris 
			Gallagher. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
 
 
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