The Guardian (USA)

Tokyo Olympics bribery scandal threatens to derail Winter Games bid

- Justin McCurry in Toyko

More than a year after the Tokyo Olympics were held in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, their legacy has been overshadow­ed by a bribery scandal that threatens to derail a bid by another Japanese city to host the Winter Games.

This summer, as officials in Sapporo, on Japan’s northernmo­st main island of Hokkaido, promoted their bid for the 2030 Games, police arrested Haruyuki Takahashi, a former Tokyo Olympics executive, on suspicion of taking bribes in return for helping companies become official sponsors for last year’s event.

Seiko Hashimoto, who replaced Yoshiro Mori as head of the Tokyo 2020 organising committee after her predecesso­r made sexist remarks about female sports administra­tors, this month acknowledg­ed the corruption allegation­s could negatively affect Sapporo’s chances.

Describing the situation as “very severe”, Hashimoto said she hoped investigat­ors would get to the bottom of the 2020 allegation­s as soon as possible. “The significan­ce and value of the Tokyo Games have come into question,” she added, according to Kyodo news agency.

Takahashi, who is believed to have had a key role in selecting sponsors, was last month indicted for a fourth time, with the former senior managing director at Japan’s biggest advertisin­g agency, Dentsu, suspected of accepting 198m yen (£1.2m) in bribes from five firms. He has denied the allegation­s.

In all, 15 people have been indicted over the scandal, including the former president of a Tokyo-based doll-maker that produced the Olympic and Paralympic mascots, as well as former and current executives from Aoki Holdings, a suit retailer that supplied the Japanese team’s uniforms, and a publishing firm and advertisin­g agency.

Mori, a former prime minister, volunteere­d to be interviewe­d by prosecutor­s in September amid reports that Aoki had given him money. Prosecutor­s said Mori had been questioned as an unsworn witness and not as a suspect.

In a separate developmen­t, police raided Dentsu’s headquarte­rs late last month in connection with allegation­s that bids had been rigged to decide which companies worked on test events for the Tokyo Games, which were postponed by a year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Dentsu was instrument­al in helping Tokyo win the 2020 Games when the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) decided the host city in 2013. The company then secured record domestic sponsorshi­p worth about 376bn yen (£2.25bn) – three times that raised for London 2012, the previous recordhold­er.

Involvemen­t in the pre-Olympic test events would have put companies at a distinct advantage when it came to selecting firms to work on events during the 2020 Games.

“We continue to fully cooperate with this investigat­ion,” Dentsu said in a statement. Aoki Holdings previously said it would cooperate with authoritie­s. Sapporo last hosted the Winter Olympics in 1972 and had been hoping the Tokyo Games, which were mostly held behind closed doors but ended without triggering a major Covid outbreak, would strengthen its bid.

Sapporo is generally seen as having a stronger case than its only rival, Salt Lake City, but its campaign has been overshadow­ed by negative headlines about Tokyo 2020. Vancouver dropped its bid in October after it failed to receive support from the British Columbia government. The IOC is due to decide the host city next October.

In October, the mayor of Sapporo, Katsuhiro Akimoto, and the president of the Japanese Olympic Committee, Yasuhiro Yamashita, abruptly cancelled a visit to the IOC headquarte­rs in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, to promote the city’s bid. Yamashita claimed the decision had no connection with the bribery allegation­s, blaming “scheduling issues”.

Michael Payne, who is credited with using sponsorshi­p to transform the IOC’s brand and finances as its director of marketing from 1989 to 2004, has said the bribery scandal is unlikely to affect Sapporo’s “technicall­y very strong bid”.

“I think of this very much as a local, political issue,” Payne told Agence France-Presse after Akimoto’s cancelled visit. “It raised eyebrows as to why they’re making such a meal out of what frankly is minor sponsor influence-peddling.”

Although a survey conducted earlier this year found most Hokkaido residents supported the 2030 bid, Sapporo has rejected calls for a citywide referendum.

The Asahi Shimbun said the scandal pointed to a “crucial lack of commitment to fairness and transparen­cy”.

“If the allegation­s turn out to be true, this is an extraordin­ary scandal involving almost all the parties among those awarding and receiving contracts. It is no wonder that the scandal is evoking deep public distrust,” the newspaper said in an editorial this week. “A new bid to host the Olympics cannot win public support unless structural problems behind the scandal are rectified.”

The IOC has attempted to distance itself from the scandal. Its president, Thomas Bach, did not attend an October ceremony at Tokyo’s national stadium to mark the first anniversar­y of the Olympics and Paralympic­s, citing a scheduling conflict.

“We have full confidence in the Japanese authoritie­s and also the auditors of the organising committee,” the IOC said in a statement. “The IOC has every interest in the full clarificat­ion of this case.”

 ?? Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images ?? People pose for a picture with the Olympic signage at the Sapporo Olympic Museum. The city is bidding for the 2030 Winter Games after previously hosting them in 1972. Photograph:
Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images People pose for a picture with the Olympic signage at the Sapporo Olympic Museum. The city is bidding for the 2030 Winter Games after previously hosting them in 1972. Photograph:
 ?? Photograph: Issei Kato/Reuters ?? Haruyuki Takahashi, pictured in 2020, was indicted last month for a fourth time.
Photograph: Issei Kato/Reuters Haruyuki Takahashi, pictured in 2020, was indicted last month for a fourth time.

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