Bangkok Post

Suga commits to press ahead with Tokyo Games

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Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga vowed yesterday to forge ahead with preparatio­ns to hold the Tokyo Olympics this summer, in the face of growing public opposition as Japan battles a surge in coronaviru­s infections.

Suga faces heightened scrutiny after Taro Kono, his administra­tive and reform minister, told Reuters last week the Games may not go ahead as planned, becoming the first cabinet member to voice doubt over their staging.

Kono’s comments added fuel to the fire after recent media polls showed close to 80 percent of Japanese believe the Olympics, already postponed by a year because of the pandemic, should be delayed again or cancelled entirely.

“We will press ahead with preparatio­ns, with determinat­ion of building watertight anti-infection measures and holding an event that can bring hope and courage to the world,” Suga said in a policy speech at the start of a regular parliament session.

Japan has been less severely hit by the pandemic than many other advanced economies, but the recent surge in cases spurred it to close its borders to non-resident foreigners and declare a state of emergency in Tokyo and major cities.

Suga’s support ratings have tumbled as critics have described the government’s handling of the pandemic as too slow and inconsiste­nt.

Yesterday’s comments echo a pledge by Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach that the Tokyo Olympics will be a “light at the end of the tunnel” in the global pandemic fight.

Organisers face no shortage of logistical headaches, with tough decisions looming over how to welcome spectators and athletes while safeguardi­ng against the virus.

The IOC expects just 6,000 athletes at the opening ceremony, down from an initial figure of about 11,000 from 200 nations, the Yomiuri newspaper said yesterday.

It plans to scale back the ceremony because athletes will not be allowed to arrive at the Olympic Village more than five days before they compete and must depart within two days of completion of their events, the paper added.

 ?? AFP ?? Japan’s Premier Yoshihide Suga.
AFP Japan’s Premier Yoshihide Suga.

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