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Tokyo Olympics in 2021 could be canceled, not postponed, without coronavirus vaccine
For the second straight week, a Japanese medical expert questioned whether the Tokyo Olympics can move forward next summer without a vaccine for the novel coronavirus.
“In my view, it would be difficult to hold the Olympics unless effective vaccines are developed,” Yoshitake Yokokura, a surgeon who heads the Japan Medical Association, told reporters in a video news conference Tuesday.
The Tokyo Games were postponed by a year amid the pandemic, which has caused 389 deaths in Japan, the country’s health ministry said Tuesday. In announcing the postponement last month, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the Olympics would be held in full in 2021 ″as a testament to victory over the infection.”
But Tuesday, the president of Japan’s organizing committee told the Nikkan Sports newspaper that the Games would not be postponed again if the pandemic is not under control by next summer.
“No, in that situation, it will be canceled,” Yoshiro Mori said, per the AP. “In the past, when there were such problems, like wartime, it has been canceled. This time, we are fighting an invisible enemy.”
Earlier this month, the chief executive of the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee, Toshiro Muto, told reporters that he could not guarantee that the Olympics will go on as planned next summer, a sentiment Mori echoed Tuesday.
“This is a gamble for mankind,” he said. “If the world triumphs over the virus and we can hold the Olympics, then our Games will be so many times more valuable than any past Olympics.”
A vaccine is seen as key to the Olympics moving forward, and last week a professor of infectious disease at Kobe University expressed his doubts that one will be developed in time.
“I am very pessimistic about holding the Olympic Games next summer unless you hold the Olympic Games in a totally different structure such as no audience, or a very limited participation,” Kentaro Iwata said.
TOKYO (AP) — The medical community in Japan is moving toward a consensus that holding next year’s Tokyo Olympics may hinge on finding a coronavirus vaccine.
Japan Medical Association president Yoshitake Yokokura said in a video media conference on Tuesday that the Olympics were possible only if the infections were under control, not only in Japan, but globally.
“In my view, it would be difficult to hold the Olympics unless effective vaccines are developed,” Yokokura said.
He did not say whether he opposes the Olympics without vaccines.
Japan and the International Olympic Committee agreed to postpone the Tokyo Games until July 23, 2021, because of the coronavirus pandemic. Japan is under a month-long state of emergency amid a rapid increase of infections across the country
A Japanese professor of infectious disease said last week he was also skeptical the Olympics could open in 15 months.
“I am very pessimistic about holding the Olympics Games next summer unless you hold the Olympic Games in a totally different structure such as no audience, or a very limited participation,” said Kentaro Iwata, professor of infectious disease at Kobe University.
Yoshiro Mori, a former prime minister and now president of the organizing committee, told the newspaper Nikkan Sports there would be no more delays if the games can’t be held in 2021.
“No, in that situation, it will be canceled,” he said. “In the past, when there were such problems, like wartime, it has been canceled. This time, we are fighting an invisible enemy.”
Mori added: “This is a gamble for mankind. If the world triumphs over the virus and we can hold the Olympics, then our games will be so many times more valuable than any past Olympics.”
Devi Sridhar, a professor of Global Health at the University of Edinburgh, also said holding the Olympics may depend on finding a vaccine. This could also apply to the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics in China, where the coronavirus was first detected.
She said a vaccine was “optimistically 12 to 18 months away.”
“Science is just half the battle,” Sridhar said in an email to The Associated Press. “The other half is manufacturing enough doses and getting these into people across the world. How would prioritization be done?”
She asked who would get the vaccine first, health workers, those working with the vulnerable or the elderly, or the elderly themselves. Sridhar said it was unclear how young, strong, Olympic athletes would “fit” into the “priority process.”
“I’m sure there is going to be some innovative thinking about how to combine safety of athletes, their coaches and teams, with the awareness that sports play a crucial role for the world — for economic reasons, but also socially,” she said.
Masa Takaya, a spokesman for the Tokyo Olympics, said he was aware of the comments from the head of the Japan Medical Association.
“We understand there are a variety of insights, opinions around the possibility of hosting the games next year,” Takaya said. “Some medical experts are also expressing that it is too early to made a judgment.”
Japan Medical Assn: Tokyo Olympics difficult without vaccine
TOKYO (AP) — The medical community in Japan is moving toward a consensus that holding next year's Tokyo Olympics may hinge on finding a coronavirus vaccine.
apnews.com