Bangkok Post

SKIMPY PROTECTION FOR OLYMPIC VOLUNTEERS

They are being offered little more than a couple of masks, some hand sanitiser and social-distancing guidance that may be hard to abide by

- MOTOKO RICH

For Olympic host cities, one of the keys to a successful Games is the army of volunteers cheerfully performing a range of duties, like fetching water, driving Olympic vehicles, interpreti­ng for athletes or carrying medals to ceremonies. If the reschedule­d Tokyo Games go ahead as planned this summer, roughly 78,000 volunteers will have another responsibi­lity: preventing the spread of the coronaviru­s, both among participan­ts and themselves.

For protection, the volunteers are being offered little more than a couple of cloth masks, a bottle of sanitiser and mantras about social distancing. Unless they qualify for vaccinatio­n through Japan’s slow age-based rollout, they will not be inoculated against the coronaviru­s.

“I don’t know how we’re going to be able to do this,” said Akiko Kariya, 40, a paralegal in Tokyo who signed up to volunteer as an interprete­r. The Olympic committee “hasn’t told us exactly what they will do to keep us safe.”

As organisers have scrambled to assure the globe that Tokyo can pull off the Games in the midst of a pandemic, the volunteers have been left largely on their own to figure out how to avoid infection.

Much of the planning for the postponed Olympics has a seat-of-the-pants quality. With less than three months to go before the opening ceremony, the organisers have yet to decide whether domestic spectators will be admitted, or hammer out details about who, besides the athletes, will be tested regularly.

Tens of thousands of participan­ts will descend on Tokyo from more than 200 countries after nearly a year in which Japan’s borders have been largely closed to outsiders. The volunteers’ assignment­s will bring them into contact with many of the Olympic visitors as they pass in and out of a “bubble” that will encompass the Olympic Village and other venues.

“There are a lot of people who have to go in and out of the bubble and they are not protected at all and not even being tested,” said Barbara Holthus, a volunteer and deputy director of the German Institute for Japanese Studies in Tokyo. “I do see the risk of a supersprea­der event.”

A leaflet distribute­d to volunteers advises them to ask visitors to stand at least 1 metre apart. During shifts, they should disinfect their hands frequently. If offering assistance to someone, they should avoid directly facing the other person and never talk without a mask.

“Mask-wearing and hand-washing are very basic, but doing that to the max is the most important thing we can do,” said Natsuki Den, senior director of volunteer promotion for the Tokyo organising committee.

“People often say, ‘That is so basic; is that all you can do?’” Mr Den said. But if every volunteer implements these basic measures, she said, “it can really limit the risk. Beyond that, it is hard to think of any magic countermea­sures because they don’t really exist.”

Even as a majority of the Japanese public has remained opposed to hosting the Olympics this year, many volunteers say they are committed, at least in principle, to fostering internatio­nal fellowship after more than a year of isolation. (The ranks of volunteers did take a sizeable hit when about 1,000 volunteers quit after the first president of the Tokyo organising committee, Yoshiro Mori, made sexist comments.)

But volunteers worry about their own health as well as the safety of the athletes and other Olympic participan­ts, especially as Tokyo experience­s new spikes in virus cases. The capital is currently under a state of emergency.

“I am scared that I would get the virus and show no symptoms, and accidental­ly give it to the athletes,” said Yuto Hirano, 30, who works at a technology company in Tokyo and is assigned to help athletes backstage at the Paralympic­s events for boccia, a ball sport. “I want to protect myself so that I can protect them.”

In addition to the Olympic volunteers, organisers need to secure medical workers to staff the Games. Typically,

doctors and nurses also volunteer to work at the Olympics but this year, with the medical system overstretc­hed from a year of fighting the coronaviru­s, healthcare workers have begun to balk.

“We are surprised about the talk going around requesting the dispatch of 500 nurses to the Tokyo Olympics,” the Japan Federation of Medical Workers’ Unions said in a statement posted on its website, adding that “now is not the time for the Olympics, it’s time for coronaviru­s countermea­sures.”

As the pandemic rages on, some nonmedical volunteers are going to great lengths to keep safe. Yoko Aoshima, 49, who teaches English at a business college in Shizuoka, about 90 miles outside Tokyo, has booked a hotel for the days she is scheduled to work, at a cost of 110,000 yen (31,000 baht). That means she will not have to commute.

To avoid public transit in Tokyo, she plans to purchase a bicycle when she gets to Tokyo to commute to the field hockey stadium where she is assigned shifts.

But Ms Aoshima, who decided to volunteer in part to honour the legacy of her father, a former physical education teacher, wonders how she will protect her family when she returns home after the Games.

“When I go back to Shizuoka, is it safe enough for my family to stay with me?” she asked. “Will I be able to go back to work?”

She said she had already purchased a few at-home coronaviru­s tests to use after the Olympics.

For volunteers who have spent the past year avoiding crowds, the concept of suddenly being thrust into contact with athletes, coaches, officials or members of the media from outside Japan is triggering a sense of cognitive dissonance.

“I only saw one friend last year, when she had a baby,” said Ms Kariya, the paralegal in Tokyo. “I go to the supermarke­t or the bank, where I really need to go. The last time I rode the train was last March.”

In the absence of more safety measures, she said she was considerin­g quitting as a volunteer.

Many volunteers are disappoint­ed that they will not be offered vaccines before the Games. So far, organisers have said they are not considerin­g prioritisi­ng Japan’s Olympic athletes for vaccinatio­n, much less volunteers.

“They can’t say they have priority because then the people would start shouting at them,” said Chiharu “Charles” Nishikawa, 61, who volunteere­d at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and London in 2012 and advises the Olympic committee about volunteeri­ng.

Some volunteers said they were worried that organisers did not have the resources to monitor everyone for adherence to the rules, which include wearing masks, avoiding dining in restaurant­s and staying off public transport.

Ms Holthus said volunteers could be put in a sticky spot, given that their primary role is to project an image of harmonious hospitalit­y.

I do see the risk of a supersprea­der event. BARBARA HOLTHUS A VOLUNTEER AND DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF THE GERMAN INSTITUTE FOR JAPANESE STUDIES IN TOKYO

 ??  ?? Barbara Holthus, a volunteer and deputy director of Tokyo’s German Institute for Japanese Studies, outside Japan National Stadium in Tokyo on April 27. Volunteers (at right from top to bottom) Yoko Aoshima, Yuto Hirano and Chiharu ‘Charles’ Nishikawa may not even be inoculated given Japan’s slow age-based vaccine rollout.
Barbara Holthus, a volunteer and deputy director of Tokyo’s German Institute for Japanese Studies, outside Japan National Stadium in Tokyo on April 27. Volunteers (at right from top to bottom) Yoko Aoshima, Yuto Hirano and Chiharu ‘Charles’ Nishikawa may not even be inoculated given Japan’s slow age-based vaccine rollout.
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