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Japan expands emergency as opposition to Olympics grows

‘I think the Olympics this time is about whether we prioritise life or a ceremony and event called the Olympics’

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Japan expanded a coronaviru­s state of emergency yesterday, just 10 weeks before the Olympics, as campaigner­s submitted a petition with more than 350,000 signatures calling for the Games to be scrapped.

With Tokyo and other areas already under emergency orders until the end of May, three more regions — including northern Hokkaido, which will host the Olympic marathon — now join them.

“Today, we decided to add Hokkaido, Okayama and Hiroshima to the area under the state of emergency from May 16 to 31,” Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said.

In these regions, “the population is relatively big and the number of new cases is very rapidly increasing”, he said.

The widening emergency, aimed at combatting a fourth wave putting Japan’s medical system under strain, comes with public opinion firmly opposed to holding the Games this summer, fearing further infections.

Kenji Utsunomiya, a former candidate for Tokyo governor, urged Games organisers to “prioritise life” as he submitted the 351,000-signature petition to city authoritie­s.

“I think the Olympics this time is about whether we prioritise life or a ceremony and event called the Olympics,” Utsunomiya said, urging Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike to push for cancellati­on.

The petition is also being sent to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee, as well as local organisers and the national government.

“Holding the Olympics under these circumstan­ces means precious medical resources have to be set aside for the Games,” Utsunomiya warned.

Thursday saw a doctors’ union warn it was “impossible” to hold the Games safely during the pandemic, but organisers say virus countermea­sures will keep the athletes and Japanese public safe.

Tokyo 2020 chief Seiko Hashimoto told reporters she was aware of the concerns, but insisted “very stringent antivirus measures” would be in place.

“We have to create a firm bubble and take the necessary restrictio­ns to avoid putting strain on the medical system,” she told reporters.

Addressing fears about the tens of thousands of journalist­s and officials expected to enter Japan along with the Olympic athletes, Suga said rulebreake­rs could face tough punishment­s.

“There are restrictio­ns on behaviour. For those who violate the rules, we’re discussing measures including deportatio­n,” he said.

In an interview with AFP, Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee chief Andrew Parsons acknowledg­ed Japanese “anger” over the Games. But he said strict rules, including daily testing and limited movement for athletes, meant the chance they could infect anyone was “really remote”.

“We want to provide this feeling of certainty,” Parsons said.

“Because we see that the anger comes from this concept that it’s the Japanese population’s safety versus the Games. I believe they can coexist.”

In recent days, organisers have held a string of successful test events, including with internatio­nal athletes, which they say shows their protocols will work.

World Athletics chief Sebastian Coe, who attended test events in Japan last week, said no major sports event so far has been a “super-spreader”.

“The world does need to keep moving,” Coe wrote in the Daily Mail.

“At a time when football, rugby, tennis and athletics are all back functionin­g, and crowds slowly returning, it would seem odd to pull stumps on an Olympic Games where the protocols will be tougher than in any other walk of life and many competitor­s and their support teams will be arriving having been vaccinated.”

In Japan, however, one of the country’s most prominent businessme­n, SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, said he is “afraid” of the Games going ahead.

“I am very much afraid of having the Olympics,” he told CNBC.

“Not just Japan, but many countries they’re having still a big, tough situation, I don’t know how they can support sending athletes.”

Several top Japanese sports stars, including tennis Grand Slam-winner Naomi Osaka and Masters golf champion Hideki Matsuyama, have expressed reservatio­ns about holding the Games during the pandemic.

Utsunomiya said his petition would continue to gather signatures “until the cancellati­on is announced”, and brushed aside the cost of scrapping the massive event.

“People’s lives are more important than money,” he said.

 ??  ?? A man wearing a protective face mask walks next to wall decoration­s promoting the Olympics in Tokyo yesterday.
A man wearing a protective face mask walks next to wall decoration­s promoting the Olympics in Tokyo yesterday.
 ??  ?? Lawyer Kenji Utsunomiya shows off placards as he attends a news conference after submitting a petition calling for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics to be cancelled to Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike
(not in picture) at the Tokyo Metropolit­an Office Press Club in Tokyo.
Lawyer Kenji Utsunomiya shows off placards as he attends a news conference after submitting a petition calling for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics to be cancelled to Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike (not in picture) at the Tokyo Metropolit­an Office Press Club in Tokyo.

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