Pakistan Today (Lahore)

The Tokyo Olympics must go ahead

COVID HAS RAISED THE STAKES OF HOSTING THE GAMES TO UNPRECEDEN­TED LEVELS BUT WE NEED THE OLYMPICS MORE THAN EVER BEFORE

- JOHNNY LUK Johnny Luk is a strategic advisor, a university governor and ran for parliament in the UK as a Conservati­ve candidate in 2019.

aLTHOUGH they are one year later, the “2020” tokyo Olympics are finally around the corner, with less than two months to go before the opening ceremony. the Olympics have never been so uncertain or locally unpopular, driven by large parts of Japan, including the capital, tokyo, being in a state of emergency due to COVID-19, with polls showing that 80 percent of tokyo’s population are against the games.

the Japanese government under new Prime Minister Yoshihide suga has so far resisted the pressure to cancel. But is suga right to gamble Japan’s health for a sporting event?

the Olympics are the most prominent global event a country can hope to host. Prospectiv­e nations would roll out the red carpet to woo the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) in a bid to become the host city. the winner is “awarded” the obligation to spend billions of their citizens’ taxpayers’ cash to build the necessary infrastruc­ture to host 339 events in 33 sports, with brand new stadiums, new roads and thousands of apartments to house the athletes Village. Ministers usually justify this huge cost by extolling the virtues of raising their country’s profile, with billions of people watching the events on tv and millions of tourists flooding into the host city to boost the economy. Further prestige comes from bringing world leaders together to build strategic relationsh­ips and strike deals. the Olympics can also be a catalyst for new infrastruc­ture, which will bring in jobs and investment. If done right, the Olympics can leave better services for local citizens to enjoy for decades to come.

However, COVID has raised the stakes of hosting the Olympics to unpreceden­ted levels. Japan is already paying dearly for the event, with costs ballooning from the initial $7.3bn budget to potentiall­y more than $26bn, the most expensive summer Olympics on record. the one-year delay to this Olympics alone has cost $2.8bn, and billions more are being spent on new safety protocols, maintainin­g the payroll of thousands of staff for another year and not being able to sell apartments at the athletes Village, which comprises 5,632 luxury homes, to the private sector. Flight restrictio­ns also mean the expected tourism income has plummeted. the Japanese people will be expecting a return on all of that investment.

the largest gamble, of course, is on the nation’s health. Japan is battling a surge in COVID-19 cases, with residents questionin­g the wisdom of letting 15,000 athletes and their entourage from 200 countries into the country during a time of increasing­ly contagious variants. Japan has the most elderly population in the world, with one-third of Japan’s people aged over 65, making COVID-19 a particular threat given its deadliness to the elderly. there may also be a further economic cost if the Olympics leads to more lockdowns. If Japan had the level of vaccinatio­n intake of, say, Israel or the uk, perhaps tokyo residents would feel more comfortabl­e, but less than 5 percent of the Japanese population has had a single jab so far.

the constant media speculatio­n about whether the Olympics will go ahead must be corrosive for the event organisers, not helped by tokyo’s Olympic Chief Mori Yoshiro’s resignatio­n over his offensive remarks about women. as the costs and COVID-19 cases have mounted, the thought of pulling the plug has likely flashed across the mind of Prime Minister suga. surely any spike in the virus post-olympics would be fatal for his government?

Yet, the Japanese government is right to resist cancelling the event. the tide against the pandemic is turning, and vaccine rollouts continue at pace across the world. as a technologi­cally advanced nation, Japan is well placed to showcase its innovation and imaginatio­n to manage protocols through rapid tests, vaccines, tracking apps and, if necessary, virtual audiences. there is also no Plan B. the government has ruled out any further delays and cancellati­on would mean further costs through the breaking of contracts with broadcaste­rs.

after 18 months of relentless battles against a common enemy, we need the Olympics more than ever before. the athletes who have trained for years, often against extreme adversity, echo the billions of individual stories across the world of people who similarly have faced life-changing challenges. Forfeiting the Olympics would be a painful symbol of defeat.

the upside will come for Japan. the sceptical British public was downcast when the London Olympics started in 2012, with complaints about costs during a time of a recession and low attendance at events, but that was soon replaced with abiding memories of national pride as they hosted the greatest show on earth. Japan will soon feel this too, injecting a new sense of optimism and national honour that will leave a positive legacy, including inspiring their younger generation­s to take up a sport.

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