The Star Late Edition

Olympic torch won’t tour around Greece

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THE Olympic flame will once again be lit in an empty stadium today as it starts its truncated journey to Beijing for the Winter Games in February.

Like the ceremony in March 2020 to light the flame for Tokyo, and like those Games, which were put back a year, today’s ceremony is a victim of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

“Due to the situation created by the Covid-19 pandemic, the lighting ceremony will be held in strict compliance with local health protocols,” the Hellenic Olympic Committee announced in September.

The ceremony is conducted at the ruins of the Temple of Hera in Olympia, site of the ancient Greek games from eighth century BC to the fourth century AD.

Clear skies are forecast for the time when the flame is due to be lit by the rays of the sun concentrat­ed in a concave.

Priestess Xanthi Georgiou will light the torch from the flames.

Before the pandemic, the flame had been lit behind closed doors once, in 1984, when Greek organisers wanted to protest against the decision of the Los Angeles organisers to accept sponsorshi­p of stretches of the torch relay in the US.

This time the ceremony will be held in front of an audience limited to the members of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, the Greek and Chinese Olympic committees as well as the president of Greece, Katerina Sakellarop­oulou, and vaccinated members of the media.

While Greek skiers will run the first and last legs, and a Chinese participan­t will also carry the torch in a brief relay, organisers have decided to skip the usual journey round the country.

“There will be no torch relay on Greek soil and following the lighting ceremony in Ancient Olympia the Olympic flame will be transferre­d to the Acropolis, where it will stay overnight,” they said on October 12.

They said that the next morning it would be carried to the Panathenai­c Stadium in Athens, a second-century arena used in both the

1896 and 2004 Games, and handed over to the delegation from Beijing 2022 to be flown to China.

Traditiona­lly, the flame travels hundreds of kilometres around Greece, visiting fifty cities and archaeolog­ical sites, relayed by artists and athletes from around the world.

In March 2020, as the coronaviru­s began to spread around Greece, spectators ignored health precaution­s and flocked to the relay.

It was abandoned on the second day after leaving Olympia in nearby Sparta, where crowds gathered to cheer Greek-American actor Billy Zane and British actor Gerard Butler, who played King Leonidas of Sparta in the movie 300.

The rehearsal yesterday fell on the 100th anniversar­y of the creation of the IOC executive board which is holding ceremonies to celebrate.

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