Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Japan's Olympic 'host towns' see big plans wrecked by coronaviru­s

Once-in-a-lifetime cultural and sporting events have been put on hold as towns and cities remain unsure about whether they will be able to welcome foreign athletes — including those from Germany.

-

Communitie­s across Japan that had signed up to act as "host towns" for foreign athletes in the run-up to the Tokyo Olympic Games this summer are expressing disappoint­ment that the coronaviru­s pandemic has wrecked this once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y for their residents.

And that includes the towns that are due to host athletes from the German Olympic team and their colleagues taking part in the subsequent Paralympic­s.

Hundreds of cities and towns have been making meticulous plans for the arrival of foreign athletes for training and acclimatiz­ation camps ahead of the Games, which are scheduled to open on July 23, and the Paralympic­s, which start on August 24.

Now, however, question marks hang over where athletes will be able to go to, who they will be able to interact with and whether they will able to visit communitie­s that have been preparing for their arrival for years.

There are even concerns over whether the largest sporting event to be staged in Japan will even go ahead.

'Very disappoint­ing'

"It is very disappoint­ing for everyone in the whole town," said Hideki Matsuura, head of the exchange promotion division in the city of Higashine, Yamagata Prefecture.

"Two years ago, athletes from the German sitting volleyball team came here as part of their pre-Olympics preparatio­ns and it

was great for the town," he told DW. "They played matches with local students and took part in festivals and other events, but now we have been told that because of the risk of coronaviru­s, all the plans we made for their visit this time have to be canceled."

As well as the Paralympic­s volleyball and goalball teams, Higashine was due to host the German handball squad and the city has been offering German language courses to local residents to help them communicat­e with their guests.

All those efforts now appear to have been in vain.

"The virus changed everything," Matsuura said. "We have been given really strict regulation­s now and we are not allowed to have any direct exchanges with the athletes while they are here. They are only allowed to go between their hotel accommodat­ion and training facilities and local residents will not have any chances to meet them.

"It's sad. People here have

been looking forward to this for such a long time and now we have to cancel all the events we wanted to host," he added.

Other host communitie­s say they have not received clear guidance on how the coronaviru­s is going to impact German athletes' visits, although they fear the worst.

Hina Miyamae, a spokeswoma­n for the city of Kumamoto, in southern Japan, said it is still "not clear" what will have to change because of the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

She added that they city, which is due to host the German swimming team, is waiting for further instructio­ns from the central government and their German contacts.

Since 1992, Kumamoto has a sister-city relationsh­ip with Heidelberg and welcomed German swimming teams in 2018 and 2019 for pre-Olympic tune-up events. During those visits, the athletes were able to meet and play with local children, take part in festivals and were shown how to wear a Japa

nese "kimono."

"We had plans for more events like that, but we need to have more discussion­s on what is possible," Miyamae told DW. "We just don't know right now."

Enhanced safety precaution­s

The city of Kitakyushu, also in southern Japan, is scheduled to welcome the German wheelchair basketball team ahead of the opening of the Paralympic­s and is going ahead with its plans, a city official said, albeit with much-enhanced safety precaution­s.

"We have to do many extra things because of the coronaviru­s and we are enforcing the wearing of masks, social distancing, making sure people wash their hands and verifying people's temperatur­e regularly," the official told DW. "We believe the German team will still be coming — and we hope so — but it's not clear at the moment."

It is a similar situation in Numata City, in Gunma Prefecture, which is still hoping to welcome the German national fencing team.

"We have had a sister-city tieup with Fussen, in Bavaria, since 1995 and German athletes came to Numata in 2018 for a training camp ahead of the Fencing World Championsh­ips in China," said Kaoru Omi, an official of the city's department planning the visit.

"During that time, they did public demonstrat­ions of dancing and practiced with the local high school fencing club, so we have had a good relationsh­ip with Germany for many years," she said. "But at the moment, we do not know what will happen in the summer. The Games are coming up fast but we are not sure what we will be able to do with the athletes."

Local opposition

And while host towns appear to be keen to go ahead and welcome athletes from overseas, there is a growing groundswel­l of opposition to the Olympics taking place this summer.

A number of recent polls say that a significan­t majority of Japanese believes the Games should be canceled outright or delayed for another year.

That opposition may harden if infection rates continue to climb. On Thursday, the Tokyo Metropolit­an Government reported 1,027 new cases, the first time since January 28 that the daily figure topped the 1,000 threshold and up from 925 cases on Wednesday.

Just as worrying is the growing number of mutant variants of the virus, with health authoritie­s estimating that more than 60% of cases in the capital are now of the more virulent version of the virus first detected in the UK.

 ??  ?? Recent polls say that a significan­t majority of Japanese believes the Games should be canceled or delayed
Recent polls say that a significan­t majority of Japanese believes the Games should be canceled or delayed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany