New Era

Australia begins vaccinatin­g athletes ahead of Tokyo Olympics

-

BRISBANE –Three-time Olympian Cate Campbell expressed relief yesterday as the Australian team began being vaccinated against Covid-19 ahead of the Tokyo Games.

While Australia has been one of the world’s most successful countries in containing the spread of coronaviru­s, it has fallen far behind the government’s own schedule for inoculatio­ns.

With the Olympics due to start on July 23, Canberra agreed to fast-track access to vaccines for all athletes travelling to Japan, despite accusation­s of queue jumping.

The rollout began with swimming star Campbell, who is targeting a fourth Olympics, among the first to step forward.

“We are going into a pretty unknown situation over in Tokyo so to have this little band-aid is a huge weight off everyone’s shoulders,” she told reporters after being inoculated at the Queensland Academy of Sport in Brisbane.

Some 2 000 Australian athletes and staff are heading to the Olympics and Paralympic­s, with officials anticipati­ng most, if not all, will be vaccinated at hubs set up around the country.

Japan has recorded just over 10 500 deaths from Covid-19, much lower than in many other countries, but, like Australia, its vaccine rollout is moving slowly.

Last week, a virus state of emergency in Tokyo and other parts of Japan was extended until the end of May.

But despite concerns about the viability of holding the multisport event during a pandemic, Japanese and Olympic officials insist it can go ahead safely.

 ?? –Photo: News18 ?? Injecting….Australian government have started with the vaccinatio­n of athletes who will be competing at the coming Olympics.
–Photo: News18 Injecting….Australian government have started with the vaccinatio­n of athletes who will be competing at the coming Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia