The Guardian (USA)

Tokyo Olympics: Asahi Shimbun newspaper says Japan Games must be cancelled

- Justin McCurry in Tokyo

A major Japanese newspaper has called for the cancellati­on of the Tokyo Olympics, warning that the Games pose a threat to public health and will place additional strain on the country’s health service as it struggles to contain the latest wave of coronaviru­s.

In an editorial on Wednesday, the liberal Asahi Shimbun – an official Olympic partner – urged the prime minister, Yoshihide Suga, “to calmly and objectivel­y assess the situation and decide on the cancellati­on of the event this summer”.

The Asahi is the first of several Japanese media organisati­ons listed as official Tokyo 2020 sponsors to call for the Games to be scrapped, less than two months before they are due to open.

The Asahi, whose morning edition has a circulatio­n of just over 5 million, pointed to widespread public opposition to the Olympics and criticised the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) for its heavy-handed insistence that the Games will be held this summer regardless of the coronaviru­s situation in Japan.

Recent polls show that as many as 83% of people in Japan do not want the Games to be held, with many fearing the arrival of about 80,000 officials, journalist­s and support staff could turn Tokyo 2020 into a coronaviru­s supersprea­der event.

Organisati­ons representi­ng doctors and nurses say the event would redirect stretched medical resources from the battle against Covid-19 and the vaccine rollout, which is only just picking up speed.

Tokyo and nine other areas are currently under a state of emergency introduced late last month in response to a surge in infections driven by more contagious variants.

While Covid-19 cases in the capital have fallen in recent days, media reports said Suga is likely to extend the measures into next month as they have failed to make a significan­t dent in the daily caseload.

Japan has reported 726,000 Covid-19 cases since the start of the pandemic and more than 12,500 deaths – higher than in many other countries in the region – but praise for its response to the pandemic has turned to frustratio­n over repeated curbs on businesses and the slow vaccine rollout.

The Asahi sympathise­d with athletes who have trained for years in preparatio­n for Tokyo 2020, but added that public health should take priority. “Don’t let the Olympics threaten it,” the editorial said.

The newspaper’s objections to

Tokyo 2020 caused a stir on social media, with “Decision to cancel”, taken from the title of the editorial, generating more than 20,000 tweets on Wednesday morning.

The campaign to cancel the Games was given a further boost after a prominent economist warned that the ¥1.8tn ($16bn) Japan would lose from cancellati­on would be dwarfed by the economic hit from emergency measures imposed if the Olympics turn out to be a Covid-19 super-spreader.

Takahide Kiuchi, executive economist at the Nomura Research Institute and a former Bank of Japan board member, said that the first nationwide state of emergency last spring had caused an estimated ¥6.4tn yen loss, adding that further damages have resulted from subsequent states of emergency.

“If the [Olympics] trigger the spread of infections and necessitat­e another emergency declaratio­n, then the economic loss would be much greater than cancellati­on,” Kiuchi said in a report. The direct loss from a cancellati­on would be equivalent to a third of a percent of nominal gross domestic product (GDP) in fiscal 2020, he added.

“These calculatio­ns suggest that the decision of whether to hold or cancel the Games should be made from the perspectiv­e of infection risk rather than economic loss,” he said.

 ??  ?? Major Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun has called for the cancellati­on of the Tokyo Olympics. The liberal paper is also an official Olympic partner. Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP
Major Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun has called for the cancellati­on of the Tokyo Olympics. The liberal paper is also an official Olympic partner. Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP

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