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IOC wrestles with logistics amid growing opposition to Games

Oct 15, 2023

By Karolos Grohmann

5 Min Read

ATHENS (Reuters) - The International Olympic Committee faced mounting opposition on Sunday to the current schedule for the Tokyo 2020 Games as athletes, teams and federations called for a delay because of the coronavirus pandemic.

IOC President Thomas Bach, who has insisted the Games will go ahead as planned, said any decision to change an Olympic Games was not a simple matter like rescheduling a soccer match and would need careful planning and information.

"The Olympic Games cannot be moved like a football game next Saturday," he told Germany's SWR broadcaster. "It is a complex undertaking and you can only act responsibly when you have a clear decision-making foundation."

He also ruled out cancelling the July 24-Aug. 9 Games.

"A cancellation of the Games would be the least fair solution. A cancellation would destroy the Olympic dream of 11,000 athletes of 206 Olympic committees."

Sources told Reuters on Sunday, however, that Tokyo Games organizers had started drafting possible alternatives to holding the Olympics this summer.

"Finally, we have been asked to make a simulation in case of a postponement," a source close to the organizing committee who is involved in drafting the scenarios said.

"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.

Other sources within the Olympic movement said the IOC was likely to hold an unscheduled executive board meeting as early as next week.

One source told Reuters the meeting could be "very, very early next week." The IOC did not comment.

Countries have sealed borders and enforced lockdowns to fight the pandemic. The virus has killed around 13,000 people since surfacing in China at the end of last year.

As the virus triggers more restrictions and claims more victims around the globe, pressure at least to delay the event is increasing.

Germany's Olympic Committee (DOSB) said on Sunday that it would ask each of its athletes whether or not they wanted to compete in Tokyo, while the DOSB's athletes’ commission chief, fencer Max Hartung, announced he would boycott the Games.

"We want to have a full picture and have your position on the central question about staging the Olympics at this difficult phase," DOSB President Alfons Hoermann said after a conference call with more than 200 athletes.

"We want especially to clear up who of you wants to take part in the scheduled Games and who wants an alternative date for the Games," Hoermann said in a statement

Serbia and Croatia also added their opposition to the IOC's plans to proceed.

"Japan has invested a lot of resources into the Olympics and they are adamant that the Games should go ahead, but that defies common sense and we cannot support it because human lives come first," Serbian Sports and Youth minister Vanja Udovicic said.

President of the Croatian Olympic Committee, Zlatko Matesa, said it was "impossible" to proceed with the Olympics under the current circumstances.

"I believe it is impossible for the Games to go ahead as scheduled and in my opinion they should and will be postponed for a few months. It won't be a dramatic delay," he said.

Germany's Hartung, a four-times European champion, said he could no longer justify competing in Tokyo and said everyone had to play their part in stopping the spread of the virus.

"I have taken my decision. This summer I will not be taking part at the Olympic Games at the scheduled dates," he told German broadcaster ZDF.

"I cannot train at the moment but more importantly I thought how can I as a sportsman contribute to end this crisis and I can do that by showing strength to do the right thing instead of training. So those dates in my view are not possible."

USA Track and Field, USA Swimming, the Brazilian Olympic Committee, UK Athletics and the French Swimming Federation have also urged the IOC to postpone the multi-billion dollar event.

Many athletes who are unable to train or compete have also demanded a postponement as qualifying events have been scrapped and training facilities shut down.

Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, Additional reporting by Zoran Milosavljevic in Belgrade; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Toby Davis

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