Deccan Chronicle

Wrong on the money

Delaying Olympics to involve ‘massive’ costs: Organisers

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Tokyo, March 26: In

2016, Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe broke with his staid public image to pop up in Rio dressed as Super Mario for the official handover of the Olympic Games to Tokyo.

The stunt reflected his commitment to an event that was supposed to be the crowning glory of his tenure. But analysts say the historic delay of the Games over the coronaviru­s may not be all bad news for Abe.

If the country’s longestser­ving premier can see off the twin threats of a larger-scale outbreak of the virus in Japan and a major economic crisis caused by the pandemic, he could even end up extending his tenure, due to expire in September

2021, experts say.

Abe has bet heavily on Japan hosting the Games, casting them as a chance to showcase recovery after the 2011 earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster, and delaying them would once have been seen as an “unthinkabl­e political defeat,” said Tobias Harris, senior vice president at consultanc­y Teneo.

But the rapidly expanding coronaviru­s epidemic has changed the political calculus, making holding the Games a greater risk than putting it off for now, he said.

The delay “removes a significan­t source of uncertaint­y for the administra­tion and could give a bump to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s approval ratings, since large majorities support delaying the games,” Harris said.

Japan has so far been something of an outlier in the pandemic, recording around 1,300 cases and 45 deaths, far fewer than in many countries around the world. If the outbreak can be contained, Abe may find himself with enough support to continue his tenure past September 2021, said Tetsuro Kato, professor emeritus of Hitotsubas­hi University in Tokyo.

“It’s possible that members of his Liberal Democratic Party argue for a further extension of his term,” Kato said.

Abe’s government enjoys stable public support, hovering around 50 per cent in approval rating polls, and the prime minister has benefitted from a dearth of viable alternativ­es both within his ruling party and the fragmented opposition.

 ?? AFP ?? Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori (left) takes off his face mask as he arrives to take part in a meeting to establish an Olympic Games planning task force in Tokyo on Thursday, two days after the historic decision to postpone the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. —
AFP Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori (left) takes off his face mask as he arrives to take part in a meeting to establish an Olympic Games planning task force in Tokyo on Thursday, two days after the historic decision to postpone the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. —

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