The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan pledges safe Olympics, medical experts aren’t so sure

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TOKYO: Japanese infectious disease specialist Atsuo Hamada wants to see the Olympics happen in Tokyo this summer, but admits if they were being held anywhere else, he’d probably support a cancellati­on.

“Even without the coronaviru­s pandemic, the Olympics as a mass gathering fosters all sorts of infectious diseases,” Hamada, a professor at Tokyo Medical University, told AFP.

With less than six months until the pandemic-postponed Games, organisers say they’re confident the event will be safe. But some medical experts aren’t so sure, and think cancellati­on is safer.

“I do understand the athletes’ sentiments,” said Michael Head, a senior research fellow in global health at Britain’s University of Southampto­n.

“But I think from... the global public health point of view, there’s nothing about the Olympics that makes any sense whatsoever right now.”

Olympic officials have started outlining virus safety measures, from pre-arrival health monitoring to regular testing in Japan, and limitation­s on how long athletes will stay at the Olympic Village.

“It is the mantra of all of us -- the Games have to be safe,” Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi said last week.

Organisers point to the success of other sports events during the pandemic, but experts note the Games will be on an entirely different scale.

The numbers are formidable: 26,000 beds in the Olympic Village alone, around 12,000 accredited media, and participan­ts from around 200 countries.

“Even if they’ve been vaccinated, there may be certain variants that have certain resistance to the vaccine,” warned Head.

“Mixing of people from so many different countries will simply accelerate the likelihood of new variants emerging.”

Hassan Vally, an associate professor of public health at Australia’s La Trobe University, said he was sure “that anything that can be done to reduce the risk is being done.”

“But you can’t reduce the risk completely,” said Vally, who has worked on virus policy.

“If you have your public health lens on, this is doing everything that we don’t want to be doing right now.”

Organisers are waiting until spring to make some key decisions, including whether to limit or bar spectators from events -- something health experts consider necessary. AFP

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