The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Mori quitting to end Games controvers­y

- YOSHIFUMI TAKEMOTO

TOKYO — The president of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics organizing committee, Yoshiro Mori, will resign over a sexist remark that sparked an outcry, two sources said on Thursday, while the former prime minister said he could not let the controvers­y drag on.

Mori’s resignatio­n would be bound to raise new doubts over the viability of holding the postponed Games this year.

The sources, who have knowledge of the matter, said Mori would be replaced by former Japan Football Associatio­n president and mayor of the Olympic village, Saburo Kawabuchi.

Kawabuchi, 84, represente­d Japan in football at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and helped Japan co-host the 2002 FIFA World Cup with South Korea.

Mori made the sexist remark — that women talk too much — at a Japanese Olympic Committee board meeting early this month, setting off a storm of criticism at home and abroad.

Mori, 83, told Nippon TV he would “explain his thoughts” at a meeting on Friday but he had to deal with the issue. He did not confirm the reports that he would step down.

“I cannot let this problem prolong any longer,” Mori said, and he again apologized for the remark.

A spokesman for the organizing committee declined to comment.

Mori first retracted the comment about women at a hastily called news conference on Feb. 4, acknowledg­ing it was inappropri­ate and against the Olympic spirit. But he declined, at that time, to resign.

Pressed then on whether he really thought women talked too much, Mori said: “I don’t listen to women that much lately, so I don’t know.”

Mori served as prime minister for a gaffe-plagued year from April 2000.

Olympic and ruling party officials told Reuters this week that Mori’s resignatio­n could imperil the Games.

They said his deep network of politician­s and Olympic officials was key to pulling off a successful Games.

But his comment on women drew sharp criticism in parliament, where opposition lawmakers demanded his resignatio­n, and from the public on social media.

“Because of Mori’s comments, I’ve recognized again the importance of gender equality and diversity,” ruling party lawmaker Masazumi Gotoda said on Twitter.

“Discrimina­tion is absolutely unacceptab­le.”

Mizuho Fukushima, head of the opposition Social Democratic Party, said on Twitter: “This is the result of many, many women raising their voices. Of course, this doesn’t resolve the problem. We need to create a society of gender equality.”

Mori was due to meet his expected successor, Kawabuchi, on Thursday to discuss the handover, one of the sources said. The 2020 Tokyo Games were postponed for a year because of the novel coronaviru­s and the pandemic is still creating huge questions about their viability, even though the government has said it is determined the July 23-Aug 8 Games go ahead.

Even before last year’s postponeme­nt, ballooning costs and a plagiarism scandal involving the official logo bedevilled preparatio­ns.

But the coronaviru­s has proven to be the biggest threat.

Nearly 80 per cent of the public are opposed to holding the Games this year because of concern about the coronaviru­s, recent polls show.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has said coronaviru­s vaccines are key to a safe Olympics and he said on Wednesday the vaccinatio­n drive would begin in the middle of next week.

Japan’s vaccinatio­n campaign is later than in most major economies and any delay could sow doubts about a government aim to secure enough doses for everyone before the Olympics.

If Mori does step down, it would mark the first time an Olympics organizing committee president has not seen the job through to a Summer Games since the 2004 Athens Olympics. Gianna Angelopoul­os-Daskalaki led the successful Athens bid but was pushed aside by the government, which appointed Panagiotis Thomopoulo­s organizing committee president. Angelopoul­os-Daskalaki replaced Thomopoulo­s after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee warned Greece they could lose the Games because of poor progress with preparatio­ns.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Yoshiro Mori, President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organizing Committee.
REUTERS Yoshiro Mori, President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organizing Committee.

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