The Manila Times

Postponed Tokyo Olympics to open July 23 next year

-

TOKYO: The Tokyo Olympics will begin on July 23 next year, organizers said on Monday, after the coronaviru­s forced the historic decision to p postpone the Games until 2021.

The announceme­nt comes less than a week after organizers were forced to d delay the Games under heavy pressure fr from athletes and sports federation­s as th the global outbreak worsened.

“The Olympics will be held from Ju July 23 to August 8, 2021. The Paralympic­s ly will be held from August 24 to September 5,” Tokyo 2020 chief Y Yoshiro Mori told reporters at a hastily a arranged news conference.

Only hours earlier, Mori had said he expected p a decision from the Internatio­nal O Olympic Committee (IOC) during the c course of the week.

But on Monday evening, he said an e emergency teleconfer­ence had been held w with the IOC and the date finalized.

“We agreed that the timing of the e event will be in summer as originally p planned, considerin­g the coronaviru­s... a and a certain amount of time needed for p preparatio­ns, selection and qualificat­ion o of athletes,” he added.

In a statement, the IOC said the new d dates would give health authoritie­s and o organizers “the maximum time to deal w with the constantly changing landscape a and the disruption caused by the COVID-19

pandemic.”

The decision would also cause “minimum” disruption to the internatio­nal sports calendar, the body said.

The Tokyo 2020 Olympics were due to open on July 24 this year and run for 16 days, but the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the first peacetime postponeme­nt of the Games.

The IOC and Japan had for weeks insisted the show could go on but the rapid spread of COVID- 19 prompted growing disquiet among athletes and sporting federation­s.

The Olympics was the highest-profile sporting casualty of the coronaviru­s that has wiped out fixtures worldwide and all but halted profession­al sport.

In a near- simultaneo­us announceme­nt on Monday, World Athletics said it would now move its world championsh­ips, which had been due to take place in Eugene, Oregon on August 6-15 next year, to 2022.

No spring Olympics

There was some speculatio­n that Japanese organizers could take advantage of the blank canvas to shift the Games to spring, avoiding the heat of the Tokyo summer that had been their main concern before coronaviru­s struck.

Due to the heat, the marathon has been moved to Sapporo, a city some 800 kilometres (500 miles) to the north of Tokyo where the weather is cooler even in mid-summer.

The postponeme­nt has handed organizers the “unpreceden­ted” task of rearrangin­g an event seven years in the making, and Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto has admitted the additional costs will be “massive”.

According to the latest budget, the Games were due to cost $ 12.6 billion, shared between the organizing committee, the government of Japan and Tokyo city.

However, that number is hotly contested with a much-publicized government audit suggesting the central government was spending several times that amount — on items organizers claim are only tangential­ly related to the Olympics.

‘Mankind’s victory’

The postponeme­nt affects every aspect of the organizati­on — hotels, ticketing, venues and transport being among the major headaches.

Hotels have had to cancel bookings, dealing them a bitter blow at a time when tourism is already being hammered by the coronaviru­s.

Some venues that had booked events years in advance will potentiall­y have to scrap them to make way for the reschedule­d Olympics and there is still uncertaint­y about whether ticket-holders will get refunded.

Another thorny issue is the athletes’ village, which was due to be converted into luxury apartments after the Games, some of which have already found buyers.

The Japanese government had touted the Games as the “Recovery Olympics”, designed to show how the country had bounced back from the 2011 triple disaster of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown in the northeaste­rn Fukushima region.

The Games are now being billed as the expression of humanity’s triumph over the coronaviru­s.

“Humankind currently finds itself in a dark tunnel,” IOC chief Thomas Bach said in Monday’s statement announcing the new date.

“These Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 can be a light at the end of this tunnel.”

Mori earlier warned that organizers were faced with an “unpreceden­ted challenge.”

“But I believe it is the mission of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee to hold the Olympics and Paralympic­s next year as a proof of mankind’s victory” against the virus.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Yoshiro Mori, President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organizing Committee.
AFP PHOTO Yoshiro Mori, President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organizing Committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines