Critics of Tokyo Olympics submit petition urging cancellation
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[May 14, 2021]
By Kiyoshi Takenaka, Ju-min Park and Sakura Murakami
TOKYO (Reuters) - Critics of Japan's
plan to hold the Tokyo Olympics despite a fourth wave of coronavirus
infections submitted a petition on Friday signed by 350,000 people
over nine days calling for the Games to be cancelled.
"Stop Tokyo Olympics" campaign organiser Kenji Utsunomiya said the
global festival of sport - already postponed from 2020 due to the
coronavirus pandemic - should take place only when Japan can welcome
visitors and athletes wholeheartedly.
"We are not in that situation and therefore the Games should be
cancelled," he told a news conference. "Precious medical resources
would need to be diverted to the Olympics if it's held."
The petition was submitted to the Olympic and Paralympic committee
chiefs as well as Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike.
It came as Japan added three more areas to a state of emergency now
covering Tokyo, Osaka and four other prefectures amid surging case
numbers, exactly 10 weeks from the scheduled July 23 opening of the
Games.
Asked about the campaign against the Games, Tokyo Governor Koike
said she would work towards a "safe and secure" Olympics.
"Though there is a global pandemic, it is important to hold a safe
and secure Tokyo 2020 Games," she told a regular news conference.
The new areas under the state of emergency include Hokkaido
prefecture, where the Olympic marathon will take place, after it
reported a record high of 712 new coronavirus cases on Thursday.
Nationwide, Japan has seen about 656,000 confirmed cases, with
11,161 deaths.
Opposition to the Games has also come from doctors, while some
high-profile Japanese athletes have expressed concern, including
Masters golf champion Hideki Matsuyama and top women's tennis player
Naomi Osaka.
Business leader Masayoshi Son, chief of SoftBank Group Corp, added
his voice to the chorus of trepidation on Thursday, saying in
unusually blunt remarks he was afraid of what might happen if the
Games went ahead.
Dozens of towns that had been due to host visiting athletes at
pre-Games events have cancelled those plans, saying they could not
guarantee medical help amid strains on the health system.
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Lawyer Kenji Utsunomiya shows off
placards during a news conference after he and anti-Olympics
petition organizer to submit a petition calling for the Tokyo 2020
Olympics to be cancelled to Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike (not in
picture) at the Tokyo Metropolitan Office press club in Tokyo, Japan
May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Naoki Ogura
HUGS 'NOT OK'
Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, asked whether the Games would
go ahead despite the increase in COVID cases, said organisers were
looking to the International Olympic Committee's backing for the
Games.
"I am aware that many are concerned that it will lead to an outbreak
of cases," Nishimura told parliament.
"The organisers are currently working together closely, based on the
decision by the International Olympic Committee to hold the Tokyo
2020 Olympics," he said.
Organisers are determined to host the Games with coronavirus
mitigation measures in place. A skateboarding event on Friday was
the latest test for their precautions.
Organisers told reporters after the event that athletes and coaches
had been told to follow measures and avoid the usual celebratory
hugs and cheers on the sidelines.
"This kind of behaviour is not OK in terms of COVID-19 measures,"
said Yasuo Mori, the deputy executive director of Tokyo 2020's
operations bureau.
"We'd usually take videos together but now we have to stay masked
and two metres apart," said skateboarder Ryuto Kikuta, 17, adding
that he understood the measures were necessary but they still felt
strange.
Spectators will not be allowed in from abroad, while a decision on
Japanese-based spectors has yet to be made.
With the latest emergency measures, 19 out of Japan's 47 prefectures
fall under restrictions that include closures of eateries by 8 p.m.
and a ban on alcohol at bars and restaurants.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Ju-min Park, Sakura Murakami, Mari
Saito, Yoshifumi Takemoto, and Sam Nussey; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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