Malta Independent

South Korea inoculates Olympic athletes ahead of Tokyo Games

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South Korea began administer­ing fast-track COVID-19 vaccines on Thursday to athletes, coaches and others expected to attend the Tokyo Olympics.

The Korean Sport and Olympic Committee said the first group of about 100 people received the first doses at a state-run hospital in Seoul at the start of the country's prioritize­d vaccinatio­n program for its Olympic delegation. They will be given second shots in the coming weeks.

A total of 930 athletes, coaches, officials and other support staff will be vaccinated ahead of the Tokyo Games, which is set to open on July 23. Athletes can receive the vaccines if they have already qualified for the Olympics or are in qualifying tournament­s, so some may get vaccinated but not attend the games.

The sports ministry said in a statement this week it supports South Korean athletes preparing for the Olympics and hopes their vaccinatio­ns would help realize their "safe, successful participat­ion in the games."

It said athletes and coaches will all get the Pfizer vaccine. Officials, support staff and journalist­s who are 30 or older will be given the Astra-Zeneca vaccine but those younger than 30 are to receive the Pfizer vaccine in line with a national vaccinatio­n program, the statement said.

South Korea tentativel­y aims to send about 800-900 people to the Olympics, 350 of them athletes and coaches in 27 events. Olympic committee officials expect to finalize the Olympic delegation in late June when all qualifying tournament­s are finished.

The sports ministry said about 150 athletes and coaches hoping to attend the Tokyo Paralympic­s will separately get virus shots on Friday and May 4. Ministry official Park Seungjoon said support staff for the Paralympic­s are expected to be given shots in May.

The 150 people also include athletes who are still in qualifying events. South Korea sent about 160 athletes, coaches and others to the Rio Paralympic­s in 2016, Park said.

Later Thursday, South Korea's health authoritie­s said they have inoculated about 3 million people, about 5.7% of its 52 million people. The government recently said it has secured enough vaccines for 99 million people, nearly twice its total population, and that it seeks to achieve herd immunity by November.

South Korea has avoided a widespread outbreak like ones seen in India, the United States and elsewhere, but it has recently experience­d a steady surge in new infections. As of Thursday morning, the country has reported 121,351 cases with 1,825 deaths.

Meanwhile, rival North Korea said this month it won't take part in the Tokyo Games, citing virus concerns. It is the first time the country will skip a major internatio­nal sports event because of an infectious disease. North Korea maintains some of the world's toughest anti-virus steps, though it has repeatedly claimed to be coronaviru­s-free, an assertion disputed by outside experts.

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