The Star Malaysia

Ex-Olympian Hashimoto to replace Mori as Tokyo Games chief

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TOKYO: Seiko Hashimoto, who will head the Tokyo 2020 organising committee after a sexism row forced their last chief to step down, is a seven-time Olympian and was one of just two women in Japan’s cabinet until she took the job.

The 56-year-old politician, who was also minister for gender equality and women’s empowermen­t, will replace Yoshiro Mori, 83, after he sparked uproar with claims that women talk too much in meetings.

The appointmen­t comes just over five months before the virus-postponed Games, with public opinion in Japan still largely against holding the massive event this year.

Hashimoto is a passionate Olympian, who competed at seven consecutiv­e winter and summer Games, in speed skating and as a sprint cyclist, winning a bronze for skating in 1992.

She has said she was raised being told by her father “’you were born to go to the Olympics’ ... even before I knew what the Olympics was”.

She entered politics in the 1990s and after a period balancing sports and statecraft, her final Games as an athlete was in 1996, and she began to work her way up the ranks of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Following Mori’s sexist remarks, Hashimoto said she wanted to hold “thorough discussion­s” with the Tokyo Olympics boss about his views.

“The Olympics’ fundamenta­l principle is to promote women’s advancemen­t in sport at all levels and organisati­ons in order to realise gender equality,” she said.

But Hashimoto is no stranger to controvers­y herself.

In 2014, she faced a sexual harassment scandal after photos emerged of her hugging and kissing a male figure skater over 20 years her junior.

Purportedl­y taken at a boozefuell­ed party in Russia’s Sochi after the Winter Olympics, the images appeared to show Daisuke Takahashi in the clutches of Hashimoto, head of the Japanese delegation to Sochi.

Takahashi said he regretted the drunken moment but did not think he had been harassed by the married Hashimoto, who apologised for any “misunderst­anding” caused by the photos.

Hashimoto was born in 1964 in Japan’s northern Hokkaido region, famous for freezing winters and snow sports.

She was born just five days before the opening ceremony of the last Tokyo Olympics and her parents drew inspiratio­n from the lighting of the Olympic flame – seika in Japanese – when naming her.

These days she is seen as well connected within the Olympic movement and is politicall­y aligned with Mori, having belonged to his party faction.

But she has not totally abandoned her sporting prowess, as she reportedly still trains regularly and takes protein supplement­s.

As Tokyo Olympics boss, Hashimoto faces an uphill struggle to convince a sceptical Japanese public the event can be held safely this summer despite the pandemic.

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