The Maui News

Officials: Olympic cancellati­on, no fans still an option

- By MARI YAMAGUCHI and YURI KAGEYAMA

TOKYO — Two officials in Japan’s ruling LDP party on Thursday said changes could be coming to the Tokyo Olympics. One suggested they still could be canceled, and the other said even if they proceed, it might be without any fans.

Toshihiro Nikai, the No. 2 and secretary general of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, mentioned the cancellati­on only a day after Tokyo reached the 100-days-to-go mark.

He made his comments in a show recorded by Japan’s TBS TV.

“If it seems impossible to go on with the games, they must be definitely canceled,” Nikai said. “If there is a surge in (COVID-19) infections because of the Olympics, there will be no meaning to having the Olympics.”

Asked if a cancellati­on was still an option, Nikai said: “Of course.”

But he also added: “It is important for Japan to have a successful Olympics. It is a big opportunit­y. I want to make it a success. We will have many issues to resolve and prepare, and it is important to take care of them one by one.”

Prime Minister Toshihide Suga said in a statement there was “no change to the government position to do everything to achieve safe and secure Olympics.”

Tokyo organizers said they, the IOC and the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee “are fully focused on hosting the games this summer.” They said Suga “has repeatedly expressed the government’s commitment” to holding the Olympics.

COVID-19 cases have been rising across Japan. On Thursday, Japan’s second-largest metropolit­an area of Osaka recorded 1,208 new cases. It was the third straight day that new cases surpassed 1,000. Tokyo hit 729, its highest total in more than two months. Japan has attributed 9,500 deaths to COVID19, good by world standards but poor by results in Asia.

Taro Kono, the government minister in charge of Japan’s vaccine

rollout, said even if the Olympics go on, there may be no fans of any kind in the venues. He said it’s likely that the Olympics will have to be held in empty venues, particular­ly as cases surge across the country.

The delayed Tokyo Olympics are to open in just over three months on July 23, and the Paralympic­s follow on Aug. 24. Fans from abroad have already been banned. Now even Japanese spectators could be kept away.

“I think the question is how to do the Olympics in a way that is possible in this situation,” Kono said Thursday on a television talk show. “That may mean there will probably be no spectators.”

Kono did not suggest the Olympics would not go ahead, but he said they could be held under only “certain conditions.”

“The way these Olympics will be held will be very different from past ones,” he said

 ?? AP file photo ?? A bird rests with a backdrop of the Olympic rings floating in the water in the Odaiba section of Tokyo on April 8. The Tokyo Games are scheduled to start in just over three months on July 23.
AP file photo A bird rests with a backdrop of the Olympic rings floating in the water in the Odaiba section of Tokyo on April 8. The Tokyo Games are scheduled to start in just over three months on July 23.

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