The International Olympic Committee (IOC) wraps up its final planning sessions on Friday with Tokyo Olympic organisers, just two months before the games are to open.
However, a recent survey has shown that more than 80 percent of Japanese people have opposed hosting the Olympics this year. The Tokyo Games were postponed last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Besides, IOC President Thomas Bach will arrive in Japan on July 12 – 11 days before the start of the Tokyo Olympic Games.
In a letter released on the IOC’s official website, John Coates, an IOC Vice President who heads the IOC’s Coordination Commission for the Tokyo Games, said: “The next steps on the organisational front after this Coordination Commission meeting include my arrival in Tokyo on 15 June, to join our team that is already on the ground. As of 12 July, after the arrival of President Bach, we will move to the full Games-time coordination operations.”
The letter was addressed to athletes, sponsors, IOC members, National Olympic Committee (NOC)s and international federations.
Together with our Japanese partners and friends we are entering into operational delivery of @Tokyo2020.
Our objective throughout has been to organise safe and secure Games.
With just 65 days to go to the Opening Ceremony, we are now delivery-focused. https://t.co/1yqNx2voJZ
— IOC MEDIA (@iocmedia) May 19, 2021
Coates reiterated commitments of Bach, Tokyo 2020 organising committee President Seiko Hashimoto, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike and Japanese Olympic Minister Tamayo Marukawa that the postponed games will be held as scheduled in a safe way.
Bach had originally planned to visit Japan on May 17 and attend the Olympic torch relay in Hiroshima, but his visit was cancelled due to the worsening situation of COVID-19 in Japan.
Coates quoted Michael Ryan, the Executive Director of the World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Health Emergencies Program, as saying, “The issues regarding the Olympics are multi-dimensional…It is not whether we will have [the] Olympics or not; it is how those individual risks within that framework are being managed.”
“This summer the eyes of the world will be on us and on Japan,” Coates said. “We have an obligation, as the Olympic Movement, to all of those involved to do our utmost to make these Games safe and secure, so that these Olympic and Paralympic Games can indeed be the light at the end of the tunnel.”