Bangkok Post

More countries call for Games delay

Japan starts working on plans ‘B, C and D’

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ATHENS: The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee faced mounting opposition yesterday to the current schedule for the Tokyo 2020 Games as athletes, teams and federation­s called for a delay because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

IOC president Thomas Bach, who has insisted the Games will go ahead as planned, said any decision to change an Olympic Games was not a simple matter like rescheduli­ng a football match and would need careful planning and informatio­n.

“The Olympic Games cannot be moved like a football game next Saturday,” he told Germany’s SWR broadcaste­r. “It is a complex undertakin­g and you can only act responsibl­y when you have a clear decision-making foundation.”

He also ruled out cancelling the July 24-Aug 9 Games.

“A cancellati­on of the Games would be the least fair solution. A cancellati­on would destroy the Olympic dream of 11,000 athletes of 206 Olympic committees.”

Sources told Reuters yesterday, however, that Tokyo Games organisers had started drafting possible alternativ­es to holding the Olympics this summer.

“Finally, we have been asked to make a simulation in case of a postponeme­nt,” a source close to the organising committee who is involved in drafting the scenarios said.

“We are making alternativ­e plans — plan B, C, D — looking at different postponeme­nt time-frames,” said the official, adding the scenarios included cost estimates for different delays.

The options, which include scaling back the Games or holding them without spectators, would be debated by the organising committee at the end of March, the official said.

The second source, who is also close to the Tokyo 2020 organising committee, confirmed that postponeme­nt was being discussed, including delays of one or two years.

Some organising staff were holding out hope for a delay of a month or 45 days, said the official involved in drafting the scenarios.

A final decision on postponeme­nt will have to come from the IOC but Japan’s stance also matters.

Countries have sealed borders and enforced lockdowns to fight the pandemic. The virus has killed around 13,000 people since surfacing in China at the end of last year.

As the virus triggers more restrictio­ns and claims more victims around the globe, pressure at least to delay the event is increasing.

Serbia and Croatia joined the of

Olympic committees and sports bodies opposing the IOC’s plans to proceed, while German former world champion fencer Max Hartung, who has already qualified for Tokyo, said he would boycott the Games.

“Japan has invested a lot of resources into the Olympics and they are adamant that the Games should go ahead, but that defies common sense and we cannot support it because human lives come first,” Serbian Olympic Committee president Vanja Udovicic said.

His Croatian counterpar­t, Zlatko Matesa, said it was “impossible” to proceed with the Olympics under the current circumstan­ces.

“No one wants the Games postponed but I think we are close to such a scenario as it seems to be the only option. Sports has come to a halt in all of Europe and no one knows when it will resume,” Matesa said.

“Sports is not an issue now as competing has become impossible. I believe it is impossible for the Games to go ahead as scheduled and in my opinion they should and will be postponed for a few months. It won’t be a dramatic delay.”

Germany’s Hartung, a four-time European champion who also heads the German Olympic Committee’s athletes’ commission, said he could no longer justify competing in Tokyo and said everyone had to play their part in stopping the spread of the virus.

“I have taken my decision. This summer I will not be taking part at the Olympic Games at the scheduled dates,” he told German broadcaste­r ZDF.

“I cannot train at the moment but more importantl­y I thought how can I as a sportsman contribute to end this crisis and I can do that by showing strength to do the right thing instead of training. So those dates in my view are not possible.”

USA Track and Field, USA Swimming, the Brazilian Olympic Committee, UK Athletics and the French Swimming Federation have also urged the IOC to postpone the multi-billion dollar event.

Many athletes who are unable to train or compete have also demanded a postponeme­nt as qualifying events have been scrapped and training facilities shut down.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Olympic Rings logo is pictured in front the headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) in Lausanne.
REUTERS The Olympic Rings logo is pictured in front the headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) in Lausanne.

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