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Regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

International Olympic Committee stays hopeful about Tokyo Olympics

Both Tokyo Olympics organisers and IOC have repeatedly stressed that the July 24-August 9 Games will go ahead

Reuters Lausanne Published 03.03.20, 09:21 PM
“We are preparing for a successful Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” IOC head Thomas Bach (in picture) said at the start of a board meeting to discuss the situation.

“We are preparing for a successful Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” IOC head Thomas Bach (in picture) said at the start of a board meeting to discuss the situation. (Wikipedia)

The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s president and executive board gave further strong backing on Tuesday to this summer’s Tokyo Olympics, with no talk of a postponement or move because of the coronavirus outbreak.

“We are preparing for a successful Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” IOC head Thomas Bach said at the start of a board meeting to discuss the situation. The 66-year-old German lawyer and former Olympic fencing champion has a firm grip on the IOC decision-making and is known for sticking to his guns in adversity.

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Both Tokyo Olympics organisers and the IOC have repeatedly stressed that the July 24-August 9 Games will go ahead as planned despite the outbreak.

“The International Olympic Committee Executive Board today expressed its full commitment to the success of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” the board later added in a statement.

However, multiple sports events around the world have been cancelled during the epidemic, which has killed more than 3,000 people in China and spread to more than 60 nations including Japan where infections are near 1,000 and 12 people have died.

Earlier on Tuesday, Japan’s Olympics minister Seiko Hashimoto acknowledged that Tokyo’s contract would allow for a postponement until the end of the year.

Despite concerns over possible health risks to spectators and participants, the Olympic body is unwilling to publicly discuss any other option, such as cancellation or postponement, knowing that would throw the Games into confusion.

The IOC board said a joint task force had been created in mid-February with itself, the Tokyo Games organisers, the city, the government, and the World Health Organisation to help deal with the coronavirus ahead of the Olympics.

Tokyo has pumped in more than $12 billion to organise the event while billions more were spent on related projects. Tokyo Games organisers are due to deliver a report via video conference to the executive board on Wednesday when the Games will be discussed, before a news conference by Bach.

Meanwhile, an Olympic test event featuring Paralympic wheelchair rugby has been called off in Tokyo.

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