Crossing fingers
By People Daily, April 16, 2021
Tokyo, Wednesday
A senior Japanese politician said cancelling the Tokyo Olympics over the coronavirus remains a possibility on Thursday, as a surge in cases renews concerns about the Games with less than 100 days to go.
Toshiro Nikai, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s number two, said the Olympics must be cancelled “without hesitation” if the virus situation is too severe.
A year after their historic postponement, the 2020 Olympics remain beset by pandemic problems, with parts of the torch relay forced behind closed doors and public support consistently low.
Organisers and Olympic officials insist the Games will go ahead safely, but Nikai said Thursday that all options were on the table.
“We need to make a decision depending on the situation at the time,” he told the private TBS television network.
“We need to cancel it without hesitation if they’re no longer possible,” added Nikai, who is the LDP’s secretary general.
Asked if he considered cancellation an option, Nikai said: “Yes of course.”
“If infection spreads because of the Olympics, I don’t know what the Olympics is for.”
He added however that he sees the Games as an “opportunity”, and it was “important for Japan to foster excitement with support from the public”.
“We definitely want to make a success. In order to do so, there are various issues to solve. It’s important to solve them one by one.”
The comments were quickly dismissed by an unnamed LDP official, who told the Jiji news agency: “The Games will not be cancelled.”
Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said she had “been told that the comment meant it is an option”.
“I take it as a message of strong encouragement that we contain the coronavirus by all means,” she said.
Japan’s vaccine minister meanwhile mooted the possibility of a total bar on spectators at the Games.
“We’ll hold the Olympics in a form that is feasible,” the Asahi newspaper quoted Taro Kono as saying.
“There might be no spectators.”
Nikai’s remarks come with fresh worries in Japan about what experts have called a fourth wave of infections. -AFP