Japanese cabinet minister casts doubt on rescheduled Games
TOKYO: The oncedelayed Tokyo Olympics may not go ahead this summer as planned as the Covid19 pandemic rages, a Japanese cabinet minister said yesterday, saying the host needs to be ready for anything.
‘‘We need to do the best we can to prepare for the Games at this moment, but it could go either way,’’ Taro Kono, administrative and regulatory reform minister, said in an interview at the Reuters Next conference.
A global Covid19 resurgence, including record infection levels in Japan, has raised fresh doubts about the Games, which were postponed by a year in 2020.
The government on Thursday expanded its state of emergency well beyond the Tokyo region, and new coronavirus infections in the capital exceeded 1500 yesterday, according to public broadcaster NHK.
The Japanese public’s appetite for the sporting extravaganza has waned, and 77% of respondents in a survey this week said it should be cancelled or postponed.
But the Games — and the tourism dollars they bring — are a top priority for Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.
Suga and others have said repeatedly the decision whether to go ahead rests with the International Olympic Committee and that their agreement to continue preparations stands.
‘‘Anything is possible, but as the host of the Games we need to do whatever we can, so that when it’s a go, we can have a good Olympic Games,’’ Kono said in some of the strongest comments yet from a government minister about uncertainty over the Games.
‘‘The Olympic Committee must be thinking about Plan B, Plan C. But the situation is not easy.’’
Kono, a former foreign and defence minister open about his ambition to be premier, is known for his outspoken views.
Suga said on Thursday he had heard nothing to suggest the Games would not go ahead and than planning was going ‘‘full steam ahead’’.
Some overseas sports officials remain upbeat about the prospects, such as Team Great Britain Chef de Mission Mark England, who on Thursday said he was ‘‘hugely confident of the Games going ahead in the summer’’.
But even if they open as planned on July 23, organisers may have to limit spectator numbers to guard against infections.
Japan would also have to ease strict immigration controls that bar most foreigners from entering the country.
Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee President Yoshiro Mori this month said a decision should be made in February or March whether the Covid19 risks have fallen sufficiently to let spectators attend. — Reuters