Beijing Olympics tickets will not be publicly sold due to COVID-19
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[January 17, 2022] BEIJING
(Reuters) - Tickets for the Winter Olympics set to begin on Feb. 4
will be distributed to "targeted" groups of people and will not be
sold to the general public, the organising committee said on Monday,
in the latest setback to the Games inflicted by COVID-19.
Organisers had said in September that there would not be any
international spectators at the Games, under COVID-19 prevention
policies that have all but shut China's borders to international
travellers.
It cited the "severe and complex" COVID-19 situation and the need to
protect the safety of Olympics personnel and spectators in Monday's
announcement.
Local spectators who receive tickets must observe strict COVID-19
prevention measures before, during and after attending Olympic
events, the committee said. It did not give further details, or
further specify how tickets would be distributed.
China, which has largely managed to curb local COVID-19 infections,
is scrambling to prevent the spread of scattered outbreaks of the
highly infections Omicron variant just as the busy Lunar New Year
travel period begins.
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Genting Snow Park, a competition venue for Snowboarding and
Freestyle Skiing during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, is seen in
Beijing, China January 15, 2022. REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski/File Photo
The Olympics, to be held in the Chinese capital and
neighbouring Hebei province, will take place in a "closed loop" that
will keep athletes and other Games personnel separated from the
general Chinese public. Most participants will arrive on special
charter planes.
Last month, North America's National Hockey League said its players
would not participate in the Olympic tournament in Beijing due to
COVID-19 disruptions of the league schedule.
(Reporting by Tony Munroe; Editing by Gareth Jones and Alex
Richardson)
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