The Star Malaysia

New Tokyo governor pledges probe into Olympic cost

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JAPAN: Tokyo’s new governor promised a formal review of the megacity’s problem-plagued preparatio­ns for the 2020 Olympics as concerns grow over soaring costs.

Yuriko Koike, elected on Sunday as the Japanese capital’s first female governor, said a special panel would review whether Tokyo tax money has been and will be used appropriat­ely.

The 64-year-old political veteran reported for her first official day of work and held a press conference yesterday at which she announced the formation of a special team to assess where things stand.

“Budgeting, preparatio­n, and the validity of the road map (to 2020) will be up for a fresh review by third-party individual­s,” Koike said, adding that an interim report would be released as early as next month.

“What is most important in Tokyo politics is transparen­cy,” Koike said, hammering home a point she made immediatel­y after claiming victory on Sunday night.

The 2020 Games, awarded to Tokyo in 2013, have been marred by a series of embarrassi­ng setbacks over stadium constructi­on and the official logo.

But a key concern ahead of the election was the estimated cost of hosting the event, seen as possibly doubling or even tripling from the reported original forecast of US$7.14bil (RM28.8bil).

Officials from the central government, Tokyo and the Olympic organising committee have also publicly clashed over sharing the cost of a new national stadium under constructi­on for the 2020 Games.

The election of Koike, a former defence and environmen­t minister, came after the previous two incumbents had to resign over financial scandals. If Koike can complete her four-year term she will be governor until just after the 2020 Games open.

Japan had to scrap the original design of the new stadium because of its constructi­on cost, while organisers also had to change the official logo after the original designer was accused of plagiarism.

But those fiascos have since been overshadow­ed by allegation­s of corruption. French prosecutor­s have launched an investigat­ion into alleged bribes linked to Tokyo’s bid. Organisers have denied wrongdoing. — AFP

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