By Bert Mendez

VIRUS EXPERTS BELIEVE HOSTING THE TOKYO OLYMPICS MAYBE TOO BIG TO GAMBLE

Mounting pressures are at stake as Tokyo Olympics organizers enter the final six months of preparations for the postponed Olympics while virus experts believe hosting the world’s biggest sporting event may be too big a gamble. The world’s biggest sporting event are due to start on July 23.

Japan has been less severely hit by the coronavirus pandemic than many other advanced economies, but a recent surge in cases spurred it to close its borders to non-resident foreigners and declare a state of emergency in Tokyo and major cities.

With 15,000 athletes plus support staff expected to descend on Tokyo for the delayed Olympics and Paralympics Games from all over the world, the Games represent a unique challenge for organizers.

According to Kentaro Iwata, a prominent infectious diseases expert from Kobe University told Reuters, organizers are facing far more danger than last year, so why do you have to hold the Olympic Games which was canceled last year due to risk of infections, and pursue it this year?          Meanwhile, organizers  have maintained that postponing the Games for another year is not on the table, leaving complete cancellation or striving ahead as the only options. 

Health ministry official Kazuho Taguchi on Wednesday echoed comments from Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga that the government is continuing with preparations as planned.

At this point, the plans are not “conditional” on the public or athletes being vaccinated against COVID-19, Taguchi said.

Canceling the Games, already set to cost Japanese organizers $15.4 billion that would lead to huge financial losses.

But Iwata, who rose to prominence with videos criticizing the quarantine of the Diamond Princess cruise ship in February, doesn’t think holding the Games is the solution.

“Is it like the attitude of a bad gambler? The gambler who loses money just pours in (more) money to get it back,” Iwata said.

With COVID-19 vaccination rollouts differing country-to-country, whether the Olympics can go ahead depends on the COVID-19 situation not only in Japan, but also other countries,” said Koji Wada, a professor at Tokyo’s International University of Health and Welfare.

Even if the Games go ahead, full-contact sports like judo or wrestling will require more testing and attention to hygiene than other events, said Wada, who advises the government on pandemic response.