New Straits Times

Fukushima ‘safe’ for Tokyo 2020, says baseball boss

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TOKYO: Fukushima, site of one of the world’s worst nuclear disasters, poses no threat to players if baseball games are held there at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, the sport’s top official said on Friday.

Tokyo organisers want to hold part of baseball’s preliminar­y rounds in the region to support its recovery from the 2011 quake-tsunami and resulting nuclear crisis.

While any such decision could trigger health fears among participat­ing nations, the head of the World Baseball Softball Confederat­ion insisted it would be safe to play in Fukushima, about 240 kilometres north of Tokyo.

“It can be an issue but from the data I have received, at this moment it’s not dangerous in Fukushima,” Riccardo Fraccari told reporters.

“From this point of view we do not have any problem to go to Fukushima.”

Baseball and softball were dropped from the Olympic programme after 2008 but were voted back in by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC), in large part due to their popularity in Japan.

Any move to stage games in Fukushima still needs to be formally approved by the IOC, however, with a final decision expected next month.

“The main issues are the facilities and the schedule. The other things are not a problem,” Fraccari said, referring to concerns about radiation exposure.

The March 2011 tsunami, triggered by a massive undersea quake, killed around 18,000 people and swamped emergency power supplies at the Fukushima nuclear plant, sending its reactors into meltdown.

Tens of thousands of people evacuated their homes and farms at the time and the Japanese government has been working to rebuild the region, although areas near the crippled plant remain uninhabita­ble because of radiation dangers.

Fukushima has two baseball stadiums with a capacity of 30,000 each, located dozens of kilometres away from the “difficult-to-return zone” designated by the government. AFP

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