The Phnom Penh Post

IOC ‘confident’ Tokyo 2020 venues will be ready

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TOKYO organisers are back on track and will complete their 2020 Olympic venues on schedule, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) said yesterday at the start of a three-day visit.

After bungling the rollout of the showpiece Olympic stadium two years ago, local organisers have come under s c r ut i ny but last month unveiled their first new permanent venue for the 2020 Olympics in a welcome public relations boost.

The new national stadium i s s et to be completed by November 2019 a f ter Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe tore up the origina l blue- pr i nts over its eye-water i ng $2 billion price tag.

But the IOC’s Games coordinati­on commission chair John Coates backed Tokyo 2020 to deliver the venue on time.

“It was a significan­t accomplish­ment to complete the first permanent venue,” he said before a meeting with key Japanese officials, including Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike and Olympics Minister Shunichi Suzuki.

“There are six other venues under way and, with t he progress of the national stadium, we are very confident of meeting the delivery dates [that have been] set.”

Other items on the agenda in Tok yo this week are securit y, ef for ts to f urt her reduce the $12 billion Games budget a nd a nt i-dopi ng protocols, of f icia ls said.

Youth focus, gender balance

C o a t e s n o t e d f u r t h e r progress with last week’s shortlist of three Tokyo 2020 mascot candidates.

Schoolchil­dren from across Japan will vote on the winner by the end of February, and Coates said the new sports approved for Tokyo 2020 – i n c l u d i n g s k a t e b o a rd i n g , sports climbing and BMX freestyle cycling – would bring some s t re et cred t o the Games.

“That youth focus and gender balance will be one of the greatest legacies of Tokyo 2020,” he added, pointing to the record 48.8 percent of women set to compete in the Games.

Koike, who has often been at loggerhead­s with local organisers over the prickly issue of costs, revealed the IOC president had “praised Tokyo’s progress” during a recent meeting in Paris as both sides painted a rosy picture before getting down to business.

Suzuki, meanwhile, underlined the role of the Japanese government in guaranteei­ng a safe Olympics.

“Of course security will be of paramount importance,” he said. “To that end, the government’s cooperatio­n will be crucial, in particular in terms of counter-terrorism measures and identifyin­g potential risks and threats to the Olympics.”

Tokyo won hosting rights in 2013, beating bids from Istanbul and Madrid, but preparatio­ns have been far from smooth.

After the fiasco of the Olympic stadium, designs for the official Games logo were ditched following accusation­s of plagiarism.

There was more bad news in October when organisers admitted that prolonged summer rain had brought high levels of bacteria to a venue earmarked for triathlon and open water swimming.

 ?? AFP ?? The IOC’s John Coates meets Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike (left) in Tokyo yesterday.
AFP The IOC’s John Coates meets Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike (left) in Tokyo yesterday.

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