BSP-08 Tokyo Olympics should have fans in stands: president

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BSP-08

OLY-2020-2021-JAPAN-HASHIMOTO

Tokyo Olympics should have fans in stands: president

TOKYO, Feb 27, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – The Tokyo Olympics should take place before
a live audience, Japan’s new Olympics chief has said, despite concerns about
hosting the Games during a global pandemic.

Seiko Hashimoto, who became the Tokyo 2020 president last week, told
Japanese media the Games should have spectators just like other major sports
hosting events before fans, although in limited numbers.

Any final decision will depend on the coronavirus pandemic, she said in an
interview conducted Friday and published a day later.

“When we think about the possibility of holding the Olympics without fans
in the stands, athletes will definitely wonder why there are no fans just for
the Olympics and Paralympics when other competitions are allowing in
spectators,” Hashimoto told reporters, according to the Asahi Shimbun
newspaper.

“Everyone wants an early decision about the direction to be taken regarding
fans to prepare tickets and hotel accommodations,” Hashimoto said, according
to the daily.

The seven-time Olympian-turned-politician last week replaced Yoshiro Mori,
83, who stepped down after making sexist remarks about women with only five
months left before the Games.

Olympic officials have said there could be separate decisions made in the
coming months about spectators from inside Japan and spectators from abroad.

Her comments came as Japanese officials moved towards removing the entry
ban on foreign athletes for the Olympics, possibly after March 7 when the
state of emergency for the greater Tokyo region is scheduled to end,
according to the Nikkei newspaper and Kyodo News.

That would allow Olympic test events from April, as well as football World
Cup qualifiers from March to take place in Japan, Kyodo said.

But Olympic organisers still struggle to ease the Japanese public’s
scepticism about the safety and the urgency of hosting the Olympic Games
during the pandemic.

The Games was originally scheduled for the summer of 2020, but it was
pushed back by one year as the pandemic raged across the globe.

Polls show about 80 percent of people in Japan back either cancellation or
further postponement.

The greater Tokyo area remains under a state of emergency declaration as
hospitals struggle to handle their caseload, although the number of new
infections in the region has fallen significantly in recent weeks.

“Support for holding the Olympics will not increase until we can eliminate
various issues of concern concerning the novel coronavirus pandemic,
including the serious strain being placed on the medical care structure,”
Hashimoto told reporters, according to the Asahi.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1506 hrs