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Coronavirus: Tokyo 2020 Olympics could be postponed for two years

Tokyo Olympic Games organisers drawing up plans for delay



A man wears a protective mask in front of a banner for the upcoming Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
Image Credit: Reuters

Tokyo: Tokyo 2020 organisers have started drafting possible alternatives to holding the Olympics this summer, in contrast to the Japanese government’s stance that postponement is not an option.

While the coronavirus outbreak has disrupted sports events around the world, Japan has been steadfast in saying that the Games will go on. The top government spokesman on Wednesday said Tokyo wasn’t preparing for postponement.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has staked his legacy as Japan’s longest-serving premier on the Games and is hoping for a boom in tourism and consumer spending. At risk is more than $3 billion in domestic sponsorship, an Olympic record, and some $12 billion spent on preparations.

“Finally, we have been asked to make a simulation in case of a postponement,” said an official close to the organising committee who is involved in drafting the scenarios.

Sources spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

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“We are making alternative plans - plan B, C, D - looking at different postponement time-frames,” said the official, adding the scenarios included cost estimates for different delays.

People wearing masks next to the Olympic rings in Tokyo
Image Credit:

The options, which include scaling back the Games or holding them without spectators, would be debated by the organising committee at the end of March, the official said.

A second source, who is also close to the Tokyo 2020 organising committee, confirmed that postponement was being discussed, including delays of one or two years.

Some organising staff were holding out hope for a delay of a month or 45 days, said the official involved in drafting the scenarios.

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A final decision on postponement will have to come from the IOC but Japan’s stance also matters.

BOARD CONCERNS

The IOC and its powerful chief, Thomas Bach, say the Games will go ahead as planned, drawing fire from athletes who say that could be a health risk.

Two senior members of the Tokyo 2020 organising committee, echoed those concerns. One of them, a board member of the organising committee, said the decision to postpone should be made quickly.

“The more they push the decision away ... more and more preparations have to be made - this will cause cancellation fees to go through the roof,” the board member said.

Bach recently appeared to shift his tone, saying the IOC was “considering different scenarios”.

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Japan’s Nikkei newspaper said in a report on its website on Sunday that the IOC will hold a board meeting this week, as calls from sporting organisations for the event to be postponed gathered pace.

The official involved in drafting scenarios said a long delay could spark complaints from older athletes and require keeping sponsors on board for longer. Another headache is the Olympic village, due to be converted to flats after the Games.

The summer 2021 calendar is already crowded while 2022 will see the football World Cup and the Beijing Winter Olympics.

Japanese sponsors are nervous, company representatives have said privately. Major sponsors include Toyota Motor Corp and Panasonic Corp.

“Of course companies are individually discussing what to do,” said a representative of one of the more than 60 sponsors. “No one wants to be the first to say anything about the possibility of a postponement.”

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In Tokyo, there is a sense delay may be inevitable. Finance Minister Taro Aso has compared Tokyo 2020 to the 1940 Olympics cancelled by the Second World War, and the boycott of the 1980 Moscow Games.

“It’s a problem that’s happened every 40 years,” he said. “It’s the cursed Olympics - and that’s a fact.”

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