NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

IOC defends ‘anti-sex’ beds

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TOKYO — The cardboard beds at the Tokyo Olympic Village are “sturdy”, organisers reassured yesterday, after a report warned they weren’t strong enough for sex.

Irish gymnast Rhys McClenagha­n filmed himself jumping repeatedly on a bed to prove the point, after the report in the New York Post claimed the beds were deliberate­ly flimsy to promote social distancing.

“The beds are meant to be anti-sex. They are made out of cardboard, yes, but apparently they are meant to break with sudden movements. It’s fake — fake news!” McClenagha­n said in the video posted on Twitter.

The report in the New York Post was based on a tweet, apparently tongue-incheek, by US distance runner Paul Chelimo who said the cardboard beds were “aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes”.

“Beds will (only) be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports,” he tweeted.

It’s not the first time the beds, which signal a commitment to sustainabi­lity, have come into question.

In January, manufactur­er Airweave said they can withstand a weight of 200kg and have been through rigorous stress tests, after Australian basketball player Andrew Bogut queried their durability.

“We’ve conducted experiment­s, like dropping weights on top of the beds,” a spokespers­on told AFP.

“As long as they stick to just two people in the bed, they should be strong enough to support the load.”

Thousands of athletes will stay at the Olympic Village during the pandemicde­layed 2020 Tokyo Games, which start on Friday.

Despite warnings to “avoid unnecessar­y forms of physical contact”, organisers are expected to hand out 160 000 condoms.

But the organising committee told AFP: “The distribute­d condoms are not meant to be used at the Olympic Village.”

Instead they are supposed to be “brought back by athletes to their respective home countries and to help them support the campaign to raise awareness (about HIV and Aids)”, it added.

Tokyo residents react after two athletes tested positive for COVID-19 in the Tokyo Olympic Village, raising fears of a cluster just days ahead of the opening ceremony.

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