National Post (National Edition)

IOC looks at Tokyo, but cancellati­on not a topic

Vaccinatio­ns, attendance, safety on agenda

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BERLIN • The Tokyo Olympics will top the agenda when the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee's executive board meets on Wednesday — but with the board firmly backing the event, any talk of scrapping it altogether due to the COVID-19 pandemic is highly unlikely.

With less than six months to go until the troubled Games are due to start, the board instead will tackle questions over the vaccinatio­n of athletes, internatio­nal visitors and the attendance of spectators, and safety regulation­s among other matters.

The Olympic body, which will meet remotely, neverthele­ss finds itself in a similar situation to March last year, when it was forced to postpone the Games by 12 months as the COVID-19 pandemic shut down sport worldwide.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is sticking to his government's commitment to host the Games, with officials last week dismissing a report in Britain's Times newspaper that Tokyo had abandoned hope of holding the event this year. Opinion polls in Japan show the public is strongly against staging the Games amid the pandemic, however.

The IOC insists there is no plan B for Tokyo.

“Six months ahead of the Games, the entire Olympic movement is looking forward to the opening ceremony on July 23,” IOC president Thomas Bach said in a message to organizers on Saturday.

He conceded that it would be a “huge undertakin­g,” but added that major sporting events already were taking place around the world without the widespread availabili­ty of vaccinatio­n against the virus.

Much of Japan is under a state of emergency, however, due to a third wave of COVID-19 infections. Should the Games go ahead, they no doubt will be completely different from past editions.

Meanwhile, one issue that looks to have been averted is the threat of the IOC imposing sanctions on Italy over government interferen­ce in sport related to a draft law there, after Rome approved a decree guaranteei­ng the autonomy of CONI, the national Olympic committee.

The IOC had hinted it could ban the Italian flag and anthem from the Tokyo Games. On Tuesday, however, the Italian government approved a decree guaranteei­ng CONI's autonomy.

 ??  ?? Yoshihide Suga
Yoshihide Suga

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