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		High fives, smiles but no cheers as Olympic torch relay gets going under 
		pandemic shadow
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			 [March 25, 2021] 
			By Kiyoshi Takenaka, Elaine Lies and Ju-min Park 
 TOKYO/
 FUKUSHIMA, Japan (Reuters) - With waves, smiles and high fives, but 
			no cheers, the Olympic torch relay set off on Thursday, beginning a 
			four-month countdown to the postponed 2020 summer Games in Tokyo, 
			the first ever organised during a deadly pandemic.
 
 Casting a pall over celebrations already scaled back because of 
			coronavirus prevention measures, North Korea launched two 
			short-range ballistic missiles before the relay began in Fukushima, 
			an area hit hard by the 2011 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear 
			disaster.
 
 "For the past year, as the entire world underwent a difficult 
			period, the Olympic flame was kept alive quietly but powerfully," 
			Tokyo 2020 president Seiko Hashimoto said at the opening ceremony, 
			which was closed to spectators.
 
 "The small flame did not lose hope, and just like the cherry blossom 
			buds that are ready to bloom, it was waiting for this day," 
			Hashimoto said.
 
		 
 Authorities have decided foreign spectators won't be allowed in 
			stadiums, and it remains undecided how many Japanese will be allowed 
			to attend.
 
 With organisers billing the games as the "Recovery Olympics," a nod 
			to the disaster as well as the pandemic, Thursday's runners included 
			many who had fled after the meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi 
			power plant.
 
 "This town is where I was born and raised, and I never thought a 
			torch relay would be held here," said Takumi Ito, 31, speaking in 
			Futaba, one of the towns worst hit by the nuclear disaster.
 
 "We are still in the coronavirus pandemic, but I think it's great we 
			could hold the relay."
 
 Japan has fared better than most countries, with about 9,000 
			coronavirus deaths, but Tokyo reported 420 cases on Wednesday, the 
			highest single-day figure this month. Polls show the majority of the 
			public is against holding the Olympics as scheduled.
 
 About 10,000 runners will take part in the four-month relay, which 
			will go through all of Japan's 47 prefectures.
 
 NO CROWDS OR CHEERING
 
 The relay, which will culminate with the Olympic opening ceremony on 
			July 23, has been hit by several high-profile runner cancellations 
			as celebrities and top-level athletes have pulled out, citing late 
			notice and worries over the pandemic.
 
 The brief, solemn opening ceremony, closed to the public, was held 
			at J-Village in Fukushima, a sports complex converted for several 
			years into a staging ground for workers decommissioning the crippled 
			nuclear power plant.
 
 "For the torch relay viewing, please ensure you are wearing a mask, 
			keep proper distance, don't stand close to each other and support 
			with things like clapping, instead of using a loud voice," an 
			announcer said.
 
 Low-key events featuring Fukushima residents in drum and dance 
			performances were followed by a children's choir before the Olympic 
			flame, flown in from Greece last year and kept alight under 24-hour 
			guard, was used to ignite the torch.
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            Tokyo 2020 President 
			Seiko Hashimoto looks on as actor Satomi Hishihara and Paralympian 
			Aki Taguchi light the celebration cauldron on the first day of the 
			Tokyo 2020 Olympic torch relay in Naraha, Fukushima prefecture, 
			Japan March 25, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/Pool 
            
			 
            Members of the Japanese national women's soccer team were the first 
			group to run with the flame, wearing white uniforms decorated with 
			red.
 The number of spectators, some waving Olympic flags or carp-shaped 
			cloth streamers, increased throughout the day, ranging from nursery 
			school children in colourful caps to elderly people clapping in 
			front of flowering spring trees.
 
 Some runners grinned and posed as they handed off the torch, waving, 
			while others set off to the beat of traditional Japanese drums. One 
			man pushed himself in a wheelchair, the torch mounted in a bracket.
 
 Most spectators kept some distance from each other and there were 
			mainly muted claps. Organisers have said the relay will skip areas 
			that are too crowded, or pause until people disperse.
 
 'YOU MUST BE JOKING'
 
 The organisers insist the Olympics will go ahead, but doctors and 
			nurses have complained about the strain on hospitals and experts 
			warn about the spread of virus variants.
 
 Japan was the last of the Group of Seven industrialised nations to 
			launch a vaccine drive. Only 700,000 people have been inoculated so 
			far, most of them medical workers.
 
 Japan has spent nearly $300 billion to revive the Fukushima region, 
			but many locals are apprehensive about the Games, as some areas 
			remain off-limits, worries about radiation linger and many who left 
			have settled elsewhere. Decommissioning of the stricken plant will 
			take up to a century.
 
 "Fukushima's recovery is going steadily," Fukushima governor Masao 
			Uchibori said at the launch ceremony.
 
            
			 
            
 "But there are still many people who can't return to their homes, 
			and many difficult issues such as reviving these areas and 
			rebuilding the lives of their residents," he said.
 
 A protester driving a van near the relay shouted over a loudspeaker, 
			questioning how the Olympics could contribute to the region's 
			recovery.
 
 "You must be joking," the man yelled. "Everyone knows we can't have 
			the Olympics," he shouted.
 
 (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka and Akira Tomoshige in Fukushima and 
			Mari Saito, Ju-min Park, Antoni Slodkowski and Elaine Lies in Tokyo; 
			Editing by Richard Pullin and Gerry Doyle)
 
 
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